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Brain rhythm associated with learning also linked to running speed, study shows

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ScienceDaily

Rhythms in the brain that are associated with learning become stronger as the body moves faster, UCLA neurophysicists report in a new study.


The research team, led by professor Mayank Mehta, used specialized microelectrodes to monitor an electrical signal known as the gamma rhythm in the brains of mice. This signal is typically produced in a brain region called the hippocampus, which is critical for learning and memory, during periods of concentration and learning. The researchers found that the strength of the gamma rhythm grew substantially as running speed increased, bringing scientists a step closer to understanding the brain functions essential for learning and navigation. “The gamma rhythm is known to be controlled by attention and learning, but we find it is also governed by how fast you are running,” said Mehta, an associate professor of physics and astronomy, neurology, and neurobiology and the senior author of the study. “This research provides an interesting link between the world of learning and the world of speed.”

How does the brain learn?

The study is published in PLoS ONE, a peer-reviewed online publication of the Public Library of Science. The ‘language of the brain’
The hippocampus is thought to rapidly and temporarily record facts and events as they are experienced, said Mehta, who also directs the Keck Center for Neurophysics at UCLA. During subsequent sleep, these temporary memories are thought to be consolidated to other brain regions for storage. If the hippocampus is damaged, it becomes very difficult to learn new things. Understanding how the brain learns may one day help treat conditions such as Alzheimer’s disease, dementia, and epilepsy that specifically target the hippocampus, Mehta said. “Deciphering the language of the brain is one of the biggest challenges that human beings face,” he said. “If we can learn to interpret these brain oscillations, it may be possible to successfully intervene in cases ranging from learning disorders to post-traumatic stress, or even to mitigate the effects of cognitive decline with aging.
The brain contains billions of neurons, specialized cells that transmit electrical and chemical signals. Neurons in the hippocampus encode spatial position information — where one is in space — through spikes, the sharp pulses that constitute the “syllables” of their language, Mehta said. “You can imagine the brain as a large orchestra; the gamma rhythm is a continuously playing violin, punctuated by neuronal spikes similar to the beats of a drum” said Zhiping Chen, a fourth-year UCLA physics graduate student in Mehta’s laboratory and lead author of the study.

The brain signals are a combination of multiple rhythms and neuron spikes from many different brain regions, each hinting at the language of the neurons, Mehta said. The challenge is to combine this vast amount of data to reveal the language of the brain and relate it to behavior.
“The biophysical laws that govern a single neuron are fairly well known,” Mehta said. “What is not known is how those billions of neurons interact with one another and form the mind.”
Tackling such interdisciplinary questions requires a diverse team of scientists and engineers. Members of Mehta’s group have backgrounds in physics, mathematics, engineering, neurobiology, psychology and medicine, among other disciplines.
“We hope to explore the connection between psychology and neuroscience. Studying how the individual brain cells interact can explain how consciousness arises,” said Chen.

The experiment

“The hippocampus is critical for navigation,” Chen said. “Cells in the hippocampus encode position information, but to navigate, it is not enough to know where you are; you must also know how fast you are going. We concluded there must be a separate brain signal that encodes this speed information.”
The experiment was performed by measuring electrical signals from hundreds of neurons using microwires 20 times thinner than a human hair, Mehta said. Nearly a hundred gigabytes of data was collected every day, enough to fill the Library of Congress every two months.

Analysis of this vast and complex data yielded an unexpected result: The gamma rhythm, a fast signal that occurs while concentrating or learning, gradually grew stronger as the mice moved faster.

“It is rare to find a relationship that is so clear,” Chen said. “When we first saw the results, we were surprised and excited.”

Does this mean movement or exercise could influence the learning process? Mehta said it is too early to tell.

“With these new results, we are asking questions which we never imagined,” he said.

The study also verifies recent assertions that the gamma rhythm, which oscillates between 30 and 120 times every second, can be divided into slow and fast signals that originate from separate parts of the brain, Mehta said.

“Surprisingly, the two signals become increasingly separated in time with increasing speed,” he said.

Additional co-authors of the study include Bert Sakmann, Nobel laureate and director of the Max Planck Florida Institute; Evgeny Resnik, a graduate student at the Max Planck Institute for Medical Research; and James McFarland, a postdoctoral researcher in the UCLA Department of Physics.

This research is funded by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute of Health, as well as the Whitehall Foundation and the W.M. Keck Foundation. Mehta and Chen are members of the newly established Integrative center for Learning and Memory at UCLA. Mehta is also a member of the Royal Norwegian Academy of Sciences.

From outer to inner space

Mehta began his career as a theoretical physicist interested in probing the nature of space-time. He was challenging long accepted ideas in the field before even finishing graduate school
at the Indian Institute of Science.
Grappling with the mathematical complexities of universes with more than six dimensions, Mehta became fascinated by how learning occurs and what things the brain will absorb or learn most readily.

Mehta’s previous research has shown that the hippocampal circuit rapidly evolves with learning and that brain rhythms are crucial for this process. The question now becomes: What is the relationship between activity in the hippocampus and behavior?

“It is amazing that we can understand things that are absolutely unnecessary for our survival,” Mehta said. “The brain is a very complex place, and our intuition about the mind is not enough to understand the brain. If we can first determine the rules of the brain, they will likely point in a direction that we have never imagined.”

Source : University of California – Los Angeles (2011, June 27). Brain rhythm associated with learning also linked to running speed, study shows., Derose, Kim.

Nanotechnology circuits for wireless devices: First wafer-scale graphene integrated circuit smaller than a pinhead

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Scientists have achieved a milestone in creating a building block for the future of wireless devices. Researchers have announced the first integrated circuit fabricated from wafer-size graphene, and demonstrated a broadband frequency mixer operating at frequencies up to 10 gigahertz (10 billion cycles/second).

Clever tool use in parrots and crows

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The kea, a New Zealand parrot, and the New Caledonian crow are members of the two most intelligent avian families. Researchers have investigated their problem solving abilities as well as their innovative capacities.

Fighting oil-spills with air-bubbles

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Curtains of air-bubbles are turning out to be a new method of fighting oil-spills. The bubbles gather up the oil efficiently, even in winds and strong currents, and keep it together in a “pool”.

Engineers envision ‘two-dimensional’ graphene metamaterials and one-atom-thick optical devices

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Engineers have proposed the possibility of ‘two-dimensional’ metamaterials. These one-atom-thick metamaterials could be achieved by controlling the conductivity of sheets of graphene, which is a single layer of carbon atoms.

Physicists hit on mathematical description of superfluid dynamics

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A century after the discovery of superfluids, scientists using a powerful supercomputer have devised a theoretical framework that explains the real-time behavior of superfluids.

Magnetic bubbles reside at solar system edge, NASA probes suggest

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Observations from NASA’s Voyager spacecraft, humanity’s farthest deep space sentinels, suggest the edge of our solar system may not be smooth, but filled with a turbulent sea of magnetic bubbles.

Chemistry with sunlight: Combining electrochemistry and photovoltaics to clean up oxidation reactions

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Researchers can make the oxidation reactions used in the synthesis of organic molecules cleaner by hitching photovoltaics to electrochemistry. The idea is simple and yet it has huge implications. To underscore the simplicity of the idea, researchers used a $6 solar cell sold on the Internet and intended to power toy cars to run a variety of chemical reactions. If their suggestion were widely adopted by the chemical industry, it would eliminate the toxic byproducts currently produced by a class of reactions commonly used in chemical synthesis — and with them the environmental and economic damage they cause.

Non-alcoholic wheat beer boosts athletes’ health, sport doctors say

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Amateur athletes have long suspected what sports medicine researchers in Germany have now made official: evidence, gathered during the world’s largest study of marathons, that consumption of non-alcoholic weissbier, or wheat beer, has a positive effect on athletes’ health.

How spiders breathe under water: Spider’s diving bell performs like gill extracting oxygen from water

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Water spiders spend their entire lives under water, only venturing to the surface to replenish their diving bell air supply. Yet no one knew how long the spiders could remain submerged until Roger Seymour and Stefan Hetz measured the bubble’s oxygen level. They found that the diving bell behaves like a gill sucking oxygen from the water and the spiders only need to dash to the surface once a day to supplement their air supply.

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