Tuesday, October 11, 2011
HPB launches mental health kit for the elderly
Robot brain implanted in a rodent: Researcher implants robotic cerebellum to repair motor function
How the brain makes memories: Rhythmically
Thursday, September 22, 2011
Ageing: Longevity hits a roadblock
Ageing: Longevity hits a roadblock
Nature 477, 7365 (2011). doi:10.1038/477410a
Authors: David B. Lombard, Scott D. Pletcher, Carles Cantó & Johan Auwerx
Increased expression of sirtuin proteins has been shown to enhance lifespan in several organisms. New data indicate that some of the reported effects may have been due to confounding factors in experimental design. Here, experts discuss the significance of these data for research into ageing. See Letter p.482
Thursday, September 08, 2011
Equilibrium in the brain: Excitation and inhibition remain balanced, even when the brain undergoes reorganization
Neuroscience: When lights take the circuits out
Neuroscience: When lights take the circuits out
Nature 477, 7363 (2011). doi:10.1038/477165a
Authors: João Peça & Guoping Feng
Circuit-level perturbations in the brain's electrical activity may underlie social-interaction deficits seen in people with schizophrenia and autism. A new optogenetic tool was instrumental in making this discovery. See Article p.171
Friday, September 02, 2011
The ageing systemic milieu negatively regulates neurogenesis and cognitive function
The ageing systemic milieu negatively regulates neurogenesis and cognitive function
Nature 477, 7362 (2011). doi:10.1038/nature10357
Authors: Saul A. Villeda, Jian Luo, Kira I. Mosher, Bende Zou, Markus Britschgi, Gregor Bieri, Trisha M. Stan, Nina Fainberg, Zhaoqing Ding, Alexander Eggel, Kurt M. Lucin, Eva Czirr, Jeong-Soo Park, Sebastien Couillard-Després, Ludwig Aigner, Ge Li, Elaine R. Peskind, Jeffrey A. Kaye, Joseph F. Quinn, Douglas R. Galasko, Xinmin S. Xie, Thomas A. Rando & Tony Wyss-Coray
In the central nervous system, ageing results in a precipitous decline in adult neural stem/progenitor cells and neurogenesis, with concomitant impairments in cognitive functions. Interestingly, such impairments can be ameliorated through systemic perturbations such as exercise. Here, using heterochronic parabiosis we show that blood-borne factors present in the systemic milieu can inhibit or promote adult neurogenesis in an age-dependent fashion in mice. Accordingly, exposing a young mouse to an old systemic environment or to plasma from old mice decreased synaptic plasticity, and impaired contextual fear conditioning and spatial learning and memory. We identify chemokines—including CCL11 (also known as eotaxin)—the plasma levels of which correlate with reduced neurogenesis in heterochronic parabionts and aged mice, and the levels of which are increased in the plasma and cerebrospinal fluid of healthy ageing humans. Lastly, increasing peripheral CCL11 chemokine levels in vivo in young mice decreased adult neurogenesis and impaired learning and memory. Together our data indicate that the decline in neurogenesis and cognitive impairments observed during ageing can be in part attributed to changes in blood-borne factors.
Tuesday, August 16, 2011
Theory of Psychoneuroenergetics
Monday, August 15, 2011
Error and Perfection
Our minds then try to reduce this error through adaptation. One method of adaptation is to change the goal so that it is closer to what we can achieve. This can be realized by having a modified goal, or a completely new goal. Interestingly, having a "no goal" state is in itself an idealized goal which can result in error when we seek to achieve it. Another adaptative method is to change the way we achieve the goal. We can re-analyze our previous behavior to reason which actions led to more or less error, and modify those behaviors accordingly.
Formal representations of this heuristics can easily be implemented. However, the question remains as to how the goals come to be about. Contribution from environmental and genetic forces can then be considered this level.
Final resolutions will either be that no error, or goal-relative perfection, is achieved, or else the ability to adapt is halted.
Sunday, August 14, 2011
"What" Precedes "Which": Developmental Neural Tuning in Face- and Place-Related Cortex
Although category-specific activation for faces in the ventral visual pathway appears adult-like in adolescence, recognition abilities for individual faces are still immature. We investigated how the ability to represent 'individual' faces and houses develops at the neural level. Category-selective regions of interest (ROIs) for faces in the fusiform gyrus (FG) and for places in the parahippocampal place area (PPA) were identified individually in children, adolescents, and adults. Then, using an functional magnetic resonance imaging adaptation paradigm, we measured category selectivity and individual-level adaptation for faces and houses in each ROI. Only adults exhibited both category selectivity and individual-level adaptation bilaterally for faces in the FG and for houses in the PPA. Adolescents showed category selectivity bilaterally for faces in the FG and houses in the PPA. Despite this profile of category selectivity, adolescents only exhibited individual-level adaptation for houses bilaterally in the PPA and for faces in the 'left' FG. Children only showed category-selective responses for houses in the PPA, and they failed to exhibit category-selective responses for faces in the FG and individual-level adaptation effects anywhere in the brain. These results indicate that category-level neural tuning develops prior to individual-level neural tuning and that face-related cortex is disproportionately slower in this developmental transition than is place-related cortex.
"How Merkel Decided to End Nuclear Power
Wednesday, August 03, 2011
Data are traveling by light
Thursday, July 28, 2011
How Eating Frog Legs Is Causing Frog Extinctions
Frog legs are still an amazingly popular food item around the world, including here in the U.S. According to a new report, an average of 2,280 metric tons of frog legs are imported into this country each year--that's the equivalent of somewhere between 450 million and 1.1 billion frogs. Another 2,216 metric tons of live frogs are imported every year for sale in Asian-American markets. [More]
"Tuesday, July 26, 2011
First artificial neural network created out of DNA: Molecular soup exhibits brainlike behavior
Friday, June 24, 2011
Can humans sense Earth's magnetism? Human retina protein can function as light-sensitive magnetic sensor
Brain-like computing a step closer to reality
Tuesday, May 10, 2011
Brain performs near optimal visual search
Thursday, April 21, 2011
Aneyoshi Journal: Tsunami Warnings, Written in Stone
Monday, April 18, 2011
Spatial navigation training protects the hippocampus against age-related changes during early and late adulthood
Source: Neurobiology of Aging, In Press, Corrected Proof, Available online 16 April 2011
Martin, Lövdén , Sabine, Schaefer , Hannes, Noack , Nils Christian, Bodammer , Simone, Kühn , ...
It is unknown whether lifestyle, including mental stimulation, and appropriate training interventions, may directly improve spatial navigation performance and its underlying neural substrates. Here we report that healthy younger and older men performing a cognitively demanding spatial navigation task every other day over 4 months display navigation-related gains in performance and stable hippocampal volumes that were maintained 4 months after termination of training. In contrast, control groups displayed volume decrements consistent with longitudinal estimates of age-related decline. Hippocampal barrier density, as indicated by mean diffusivity estimated from diffusion tensor imaging, showed a quadratic shape of increased density after training followed..."
Reversible large-scale modification of cortical networks during neuroprosthetic control
Reversible large-scale modification of cortical networks during neuroprosthetic control
Nature Neuroscience.
doi:10.1038/nn.2797
Authors: Karunesh Ganguly, Dragan F Dimitrov, Jonathan D Wallis & Jose M Carmena
"
Thursday, April 07, 2011
Better a sprint than a marathon: Brief intense exercise better than endurance training for preventing cardiovascular disease
Wednesday, March 30, 2011
A synaptic organizing principle for cortical neuronal groups [Neuroscience]
Saturday, March 12, 2011
[Review] How to Grow a Mind: Statistics, Structure, and Abstraction
Authors: Joshua B. Tenenbaum, Charles Kemp, Thomas L. Griffiths, Noah D. Goodman"
Friday, March 11, 2011
200-300 bodies found in Japan's tsunami-hit Sendai
Wednesday, March 09, 2011
Alcoholic Beverages Induce Superconductivity
Wine can help keep conversation flowing at a dinner party. And now it looks like that wine may aid in materials science as well. Japanese researchers discovered that hot alcoholic beverages induce superconductivity in iron-based compounds.
[More]"
Tuesday, March 08, 2011
Why information can't be the basis of reality
Is everything information? This seductive idea animates the brand-new book The Information by James Gleick (Pantheon 2011), which I just rave-reviewed in The Wall Street Journal . Gleick's book is, among other things, an in-depth biography of information theory, which the Bell Labs mathematician Claude Shannon invented in 1948 to provide a framework for improving the efficiency of communications.
A growing number of scientists, Gleick writes, are beginning to wonder whether information "may be primary: more fundamental than matter itself." This notion has inspired other recent books, including Programming the Universe by Seth Lloyd (Vintage 2007), Decoding the Universe by Charles Seife (Penguin 2007), Decoding Reality by Vlatko Vedral (Oxford 2010) and Information and the Nature of Reality , a collection of essays edited by Paul Davies (Cambridge 2010). But the everything-is-information meme violates common sense.
[More]"Thursday, February 24, 2011
Effects of Cell Phone Radiofrequency Signal Exposure on Brain Glucose Metabolism [Preliminary Communication]
Context The dramatic increase in use of cellular telephones has generated concern about possible negative effects of radiofrequency signals delivered to the brain. However, whether acute cell phone exposure affects the human brain is unclear.
Objective To evaluate if acute cell phone exposure affects brain glucose metabolism, a marker of brain activity.
Design, Setting, and Participants Randomized crossover study conducted between January 1 and December 31, 2009, at a single US laboratory among 47 healthy participants recruited from the community. Cell phones were placed on the left and right ears and positron emission tomography with (18F)fluorodeoxyglucose injection was used to measure brain glucose metabolism twice, once with the right cell phone activated (sound muted) for 50 minutes ('on' condition) and once with both cell phones deactivated ('off' condition). Statistical parametric mapping was used to compare metabolism between on and off conditions using paired t tests, and Pearson linear correlations were used to verify the association of metabolism and estimated amplitude of radiofrequency-modulated electromagnetic waves emitted by the cell phone. Clusters with at least 1000 voxels (volume >8 cm3) and P < .05 (corrected for multiple comparisons) were considered significant.
Main Outcome Measure Brain glucose metabolism computed as absolute metabolism (µmol/100 g per minute) and as normalized metabolism (region/whole brain).
Results Whole-brain metabolism did not differ between on and off conditions. In contrast, metabolism in the region closest to the antenna (orbitofrontal cortex and temporal pole) was significantly higher for on than off conditions (35.7 vs 33.3 µmol/100 g per minute; mean difference, 2.4 [95% confidence interval, 0.67-4.2]; P = .004). The increases were significantly correlated with the estimated electromagnetic field amplitudes both for absolute metabolism (R = 0.95, P < .001) and normalized metabolism (R = 0.89; P < .001).
Conclusions In healthy participants and compared with no exposure, 50-minute cell phone exposure was associated with increased brain glucose metabolism in the region closest to the antenna. This finding is of unknown clinical significance.
"Robot Butler Hitching Ride to Space on Shuttle Discovery - Fox News
CBC.ca | Robot Butler Hitching Ride to Space on Shuttle Discovery Fox News Life aboard the International Space Station will get a little cushier when a robot butler arrives at the orbiting lab later this week. The space shuttle Discovery, slated to launch Thursday afternoon, is carrying a humanoid robot named ... Space shuttle Discovery fueled for its last flightReuters Final countdown: Space shuttle Discover blasts off for the last time todayDigitaltrends.com Space shuttle Discovery poised for final liftoffUSA Today Space.com -The Daily Citizen all 1,919 news articles » |
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
National Margarita Day: Recipes to Celebrate With! - myGLOSS
HULIQ | National Margarita Day: Recipes to Celebrate With! myGLOSS It's National Margarita Day! Who knew? But now that you do know, we've got some recipes to help you celebrate the holiday with classic recipes and some tasty variations too. First, a good margarita has to have good chips and salsa to go with…so pick up ... It's National Margarita DayMyFox Chicago Today is National Margarita DayCorpus Christi Caller Times It's National Margarita Day - do you have a favorite NJ Mexican restaurant?NJ.com Huffington Post -Long Island Press -San Antonio Express all 42 news articles » |