Neuroscience uses the epileptic patients who are operated to follow the movement of the mind in the human brain. The thought was followed in unprecedented detail, from the emergence to the development of the rebellion.

in #neuroscience7 years ago


We did not know it was possible.

Neuroscience uses the epileptic patients who are operated to follow the movement of the mind in the human brain. The thought was followed in unprecedented detail, from the emergence to the development of the rebellion

In a study led by researchers at the University of California at Berkeley, a precise method called electrocortography (ECoG) was used and the electrical activity of the nerve cells was recorded.

To do this, hundreds of small electrodes were placed just above the cortex. In this case, more spatial details than EEG and better resolutions than FMRI were obtained.

This was an excellent opportunity for researchers to carry out a few tests, as researchers' observations of brain activity in patients with epilepsy surgery were equally observed, even though what they did was unethical danger for an average volunteer.

None of these events were unexpected, but the results clearly emphasized the role of the prefrontal cortex in managing activity.

From these highly selective studies, the frontal cortex was found to be an orchestra and to link a number of things together for a final output. "" He has the property of being a sticky person, "says the neuroscientist Robert Knight of UC Berkeley. It was observed that the activity continued throughout the section. This was also expected for a region with more than one job in his brain.

The faster one area passes to another, the more quickly people react to a stimulus. "As a task in FMRI studies is usually more difficult, progress has been made in the brain, especially in the prefrontal cortex," says the head of the study, Avgusta Shestyuk. "Our reason we can see it here, but a lot of work and a lot of nerve cells, rather than sending continuous signals, executing in more areas of the cortex." Source: Popular Science Turkey

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Hi, nice article! I'm really interested in stuff like this :)