作者mulkcs (mulkcs)
看板Cognitive
標題[新知] Facebook Neuron?
時間Tue Jan 11 18:59:20 2011
Researchers Identify 'Facebook Neurons': Population of Highly Active Neurons
Could Provide Insight Into the Neocortex
ScienceDaily (Jan. 10, 2011) — Carnegie Mellon University researchers have
found that within the brain's neocortex lies a subnetwork of highly active
neurons that behave much like people in social networks. Like Facebook, these
neuronal networks have a small population of highly active members who give
and receive more information than the majority of other members, says Alison
Barth, associate professor of biological sciences at Carnegie Mellon and a
member of the Center for the Neural Basis of Cognition (CNBC). By identifying
these neurons, scientists will now be able to study them further and increase
their understanding of the neocortex, which is thought to be the brain's
center of higher learning.
The study has been published in the journal Neuron.
Up to trillions of neurons make up the neocortex, the part of the cerebral
cortex that is responsible for a number of important functions, including
sensory perception, motor function, spatial reasoning, conscious thought and
language. Although neuroscientists have been studying the neocortex for 40
years, technologies had only allowed them to look broadly at general areas of
the brain, but not at the high-resolution of individual neurons. While they
believed only a small proportion of neurons were doing most of the work in
the neocortex, they couldn't see if this was indeed the case.
In the current study, the researchers used a specialized transgenic mouse
model developed by Barth to overcome these challenges and clearly see which
neocortical neurons were the most active. The model links green fluorescent
protein (GFP) with the activity-dependent gene fos, causing the neuron to
light up when it is activated. The researchers, including former Carnegie
Mellon and CNBC postdoctoral student Lina Yassin, who is now at the
Ludwig-Maximillians-Universtat Munich, took recordings from both fos-labeled
and unlabeled neurons and found that the most active neurons were expressing
the fos gene. The researchers were then able to isolate the active neurons
using imaging techniques and take electrophysiological recordings from the
neurons, allowing the researchers to begin to understand the mechanisms
underlying the increased activity.
Barth and colleagues were able to see that the fos-expressing neurons weren't
more active because they were intrinsically more excitable; in fact, the
neurons seemed to be calmer or more suppressed than their neighboring,
inactive neurons. What made them more active was their input.
According to Barth, it seems that this active network of neurons in the
neocortex acts like a social network. There is a small, but significant,
population of neurons that are more connected than other neurons. These
neurons do most of the heavy lifting, giving and receiving more information
than the rest of the neurons in their network.
"It's like Facebook. Most of your friends don't post much -- if at all. But,
there is a small percentage of your friends on Facebook who update their
status and page often. Those people are more likely to be connected to more
friends, so while they're sharing more information, they're also receiving
more information from their expanded network, which includes other more
active participants," Barth said.
The findings stand to have a dramatic impact on neuroscience. Now that
researchers are able to identify and visualize these active cells they can
begin to determine why they are more active and how stable the activity is.
The Carnegie Mellon researchers plan to study these neurons to see what, if
any, role these neurons play in learning.
The results also will help to further computational neuroscience,
specifically in the area of sparse coding. In sparse coding, scientists hope
to study how the brain recruits a small population of neurons to encode
information. This research will for the first time allow for the study of the
electrophysiological properties of strongly responsive but sparsely populated
cells.
This research was supported by the National Institutes of Health, the
Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, NeuroCure, the Deutsch Forschung
Gemeinshaft, the Swiss-German Research Unit "Barrel Cortex Function" and the
Max-Delbruck Center.
Other researchers on the study include: Brett Benedetti and Jing Wen of
Carnegie Mellon; and Jean-Sebastien Jouhanneau and James Poulet of the
Max-Delbruck Center for Molecular Medicine and Neuroscience Research Center
of the Charite Universitatmedizin in Berlin.
--
原始網址:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/01/110110121625.htm
論文:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2010.11.029
大意就是科學家找到一些神經元,在同一個Network下,
會比其他神經元要活躍的很多。
就像你在看Facebook時,總是一群人裡面會有幾個人特別活躍一樣。XD
--
※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.cc)
◆ From: 140.112.33.136
1F:→ shoxx:這不是團體自然會有的現象嗎XD 01/11 20:58
2F:→ mulkcs:不過他這篇有一個比較啟發的觀點是說,那是不是要研究這一 01/12 14:00
3F:→ mulkcs:群神經元的反應就只需要瞭解這幾個活躍的神經元就夠了? 01/12 14:00
4F:→ shoxx:這觀點很令人玩味阿 01/12 20:40
5F:→ dusker:還真是會下標題…我還以為找到上臉書特別活躍的神經元… 01/18 13:48