Tag: brain

Brain waves

“neuronal noise” may not be a nuisance at all, but instead the brain’s way of providing as comprehensive a statistical representation of the observable world as possible.

2018-11-15: Meditation’s effect in brain waves

What’s going on in the brains of people who meditate? Anecdotal evidence suggests that meditation does something to people’s minds and bodies…quiets and calms them. Davidson brought a number of “Olympic level meditators” into his lab and hooked them up to a brain scanner. He found that the brains of these expert meditators have different brain wave patterns than the rest of us.

2019-08-06: Ripples for memory

researchers have offered up proof that sharp wave ripples play a part in memory: Artificially prolonging the ripples in rats improved their performance

2019-08-12: Keeping the Brain’s Cells in Sync with Gamma Rhythm Synchronization

“It may make a lot of sense that gamma rhythms matter in the brain”. But rather than measuring that rhythm’s aggregate signal across the entire brain, neuroscientists might need to look at several signals, each one accounting for some smaller section of the brain. “You have to go down to the level of local groups of neurons to really see what they’re doing.”

2021-02-23: 1/f noise

The amplitudes for power spectra are usually plotted in logarithmic coordinates because of the wide range in their values. For purely random white noise, the power spectrum curve is relatively flat and horizontal, with a slope of zero, because it’s about the same at all frequencies. But neural data produces curves with a negative slope such that lower frequencies have higher amplitudes, and the intensity drops off exponentially for higher frequencies. This shape is called 1/f, referring to that inverse relationship between the frequency and the amplitude. Neuroscientists are interested in what the flatness or steepness of the slope might indicate about the brain’s inner workings.

2021-05-27: Brain synchronization sociality

Mr. Wu zapped the 2 mice at the same time and at the same rapid frequency — putting that portion of their brains quite literally in sync. Within 1 minute, any animus between the 2 creatures seemed to disappear, and they clung to each other like long-lost friends. “Those animals actually stayed together, and 1 animal was grooming the other”. If brain-to-brain synchrony does turn out to be a real driver of social interaction, it could have some meaningful applications for people who struggle with social anxiety disorders, for example. Several noninvasive techniques, like transcranial magnetic stimulation, can stimulate people’s brain activity and are being tested as treatments for a range of psychiatric disorders. “The human sociality spectrum is very broad, and there’s probably a subset of people who wouldn’t mind if it was possible to influence their level of sociality.”

2021-07-09: Phase precession

Along with rate, there’s also timing: As the rat passes through a place field, the associated place cell fires earlier and earlier with respect to the cycle of the background theta wave. As the rat crosses from 1 place field into another, the very early firing of the first place cell occurs close in time with the late firing of the next place cell. Their near-coincident firings cause the synapse, or connection, between them to strengthen, and this coupling of the place cells ingrains the rat’s trajectory into the brain. (Information seems to be encoded through the strengthening of synapses only when 2 neurons fire within 10s of milliseconds of each other.)

“It’s so prominent and prevalent in the rodent brain that it makes you want to assume it’s a generalizable mechanism”. Scientists had also identified phase precession in the spatial processing of bats and marmosets, but the pattern was elusive in humans until now. Studies suggest that phase precession allows the brain to link sequences of times, images and events in the same way as it does spatial positions. Phase Precession might facilitate very rapid learning of sequences, explaining why artificial neural networks train on 100s or 100s of examples of a pattern before the synapse strengths adjust enough for the network to learn, while humans can typically learn from just 1 or a handful of examples.

2023-02-04: Critical brain hypothesis

The brain is always teetering between 2 phases of activity: a random phase, where it is mostly inactive, and an ordered phase, where it is overactive and on the verge of a seizure. The hypothesis predicts that between these phases, at a sweet spot known as the critical point, the brain has a perfect balance of variety and structure and can produce the most complex and information-rich activity patterns. This state allows the brain to optimize multiple information processing tasks, from carrying out computations to transmitting and storing information, all at the same time.

Early critiques pointed out that proving a network was near the critical point required improved statistical tests. The field responded constructively, and this type of objection is rarely heard these days. More recently, some work has shown that what was previously considered a signature of criticality might also be the result of random processes. Researchers are still investigating that possibility, but many of them have already proposed new criteria for distinguishing between the apparent criticality of random noise and the true criticality of collective interactions among neurons.

Research in this area has steadily become more visible. The breadth of methods being used to assess it has also grown. The biggest questions now focus on how operating near the critical point affects cognition, and how external inputs can drive a network to move around the critical point. Ideas about criticality have also begun to spread beyond neuroscience. Citing some of the original papers on criticality in living neural networks, engineers have shown that self-organized networks of atomic switches can be made to operate near the critical point so that they compute many functions optimally. The deep learning community has also begun to study whether operating near the critical point improves artificial neural networks.

Botox for World Peace

People with Botox may be less vulnerable to the angry emotions of other people because they themselves can’t make angry or unhappy faces as easily. And because people with Botox can’t spread bad feelings to others via their expressions, people without Botox may be happier too

2012-11-26: for those of you having trouble delivering your lines

Card players who don’t want to give themselves away and tip their hand can turn to using Botox to “allow people to gain a poker face’’ in a service he calls Pokertox.

Cartesian dualism

The latest salvo in the war on Darwin: a resurrection of Cartesian dualism, with the idea that the brain is a physical object, but the mind that inhabits it is made from some kind of ghostly Jesusite-235 that conclusively proves the existence of the Invisible Sky Daddy in a white robe and beard

Signs of despair, and retreat to the last frontier of science. Once Jeff Hawkins decodes the brain these bozos can go screw themselves.

Spaced Repetition

Wozniak realized that computers could easily calculate the moment of forgetting if he could discover the right algorithm. SuperMemo is the result of his research. It predicts the future state of a person’s memory and schedules information reviews at the optimal time. The effect is striking. Users can seal huge quantities of vocabulary into their brains.

need to check out supermemo. it sounds very intriguing.

Nootropics

20% of Nature readers use cognitive enhancers to improve their focus, concentration, or memory. Among those who choose to use, methylphenidate was the most popular agent: 62% of users reported taking it. Modafinil was taken by 44% of users and beta blockers by 15%. Many of the subjects were using more than 1 drug

2009-01-21: cognition-dulling drugs and cures for resentment, envy, or union-organizing may also serve to enhance workplace efficiency.
2009-05-07: it’s only a war on drugs if the drug in question makes you stupid

If I drink a cup of coffee, I (seemingly) think a bit faster. We call this tradition. If I take a modafinil I (measurably) think a bit faster. We call this cheating.

2010-04-28: And some philosophical considerations:

Cognitive enhancement takes many and diverse forms. Various methods of cognitive enhancement have implications for the near future. At the same time, these technologies raise a range of ethical issues. For example, they interact with notions of authenticity, the good life, and the role of medicine in our lives. Present and anticipated methods for cognitive enhancement also create challenges for public policy and regulation.

2015-02-19: Any progress in telling which, if any, nootropics actually work, is welcome.

The research, published in open-access Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience, uses an algorithm that maps expression data onto signaling pathways. The collective pathways and their activation form a “signaling pathway cloud” — a biological fingerprint of cognitive enhancement. Drugs can then be screened and ranked based on their ability to minimize, mimic, or exaggerate pathway activation or suppression within that cloud.

2018-10-24: And what are the mechanisms?

But why should there be smart drugs? Popular metaphors speak of drugs fitting into receptors like “a key into a lock” to “flip a switch”. But why should there be a locked switch in the brain to shift from THINK WORSE to THINK BETTER? Why not just always stay on the THINK BETTER side? Wouldn’t we expect some kind of tradeoff?

Piracetam and nicotine have something in common: both activate the brain’s acetylcholine system. So do 3 of the most successful Alzheimers drugs: donepezil, rivastigmine, and galantamine. What is acetylcholine and why does activating it improve memory and cognition?

2018-10-30: Is it going to be big business?

Mind-expansion may soon become big business. Even though the drugs have been developed to treat disease, it will be hard to prevent their use by the healthy.

2019-10-13: Modafinil:

The overall positive effect of modafinil over placebo across all cognitive domains was small and significant (g = 0.10; 95% confidence interval, 0.05-0.15; P < 0.001). No significant differences between cognitive domains were found. Likewise, no significant moderation was found for modafinil dose (100 mg vs 200 mg) or for the populations studied (psychiatric vs nonpsychiatric).

2021-04-28: Zembrin:

The subgroup who used Zembrin reported a mean effectiveness of 6.88, which beats out modafinil to make it highest on the list. After ad hoc Bayesian adjustment, it was 6.72, second only to modafinil as the second most effective nootropic on the list. This really excites me – I’ve felt like Zembrin was special for a while, and this is the only case of a newer nootropic on the survey beating the mainstays. And it’s a really unexpected victory. The top 8 substances in the list are all either stimulants, addictive, illegal in the US, or all 3. Zembrin is none of those, and it beats them all.