by David F. Salisbury
Team work is just as important in your brain as it is on the playing field. A new study published online on April 19 by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
reports that groups of brain cells can substantially improve their
ability to discriminate between different orientations of simple visual
patterns by synchronizing their electrical activity.
The paper, “Cooperative synchronized assemblies enhance orientation
discrimination,” by professor of biomedical engineering A. B. Bonds
with graduate students Jason Samonds and Heather A. Brown and research
associate John D. Allison provides some of the first solid evidence
that the exact timing of the tiny electrical spikes produced by neurons
plays an important role in brain functioning.
Since the discovery of alpha waves in 1929, experts have known that
neurons in different parts of the brain periodically coordinate their
activity with their neighbors. Despite a variety of theories, however,
scientists have not been able to determine whether this “neuronal
synchrony” has a functional role or if it is just a by-product of the
brain’s electrical activity.
Until recently studies have focused on the firing rate of brain cells
as the basic unit of information – the bits and bytes – used by our
organic computer. The reason for this fixation was evidence that the
firing rates of sensory neurons contain important information. For
example, the higher the firing rate of the pain-sensing neurons in the
back of your hand, the greater your brain’s perception of pain in that
location.
“We are exploring how information is represented by the brain,” said A.
B. Bonds, professor of biomedical engineering, who co-authored the new
study with graduate students,
“One representation is the firing rate of individual nerve cells, but
this does not acknowledge the intricate network structure of the brain,
where each cell is connected with 1,000 other cells, on average. One
way of representing information that depends on this network structure
is the degree of ‘agreement’ between groups of brain cells. That is
what we have found in the form of the synchronous behavior of groups of
cells.”
“For the last five years or so, a growing number of people have been
exploring the theoretical possibility that the timing of the arrival of
electrical spikes is useful for performing neural computations,” said
David Noelle, assistant professor of computer science and psychology,
who did not participate in the study. “The Bonds paper can be seen as
the first step towards providing a test of these theoretical models.”
Scientists studying vision have known for some time that different
groups of neurons in the visual cortex respond selectively to the way
in which objects are oriented. For example, when a subject views a
horizontal bar, one group of neurons begins firing, while a different
group begins firing when the bar becomes vertical.
“People have the ability to discriminate between orientations that
differ by only a third of a degree. That is pretty remarkable when you
consider that individual neurons normally don’t respond to changes in
orientation of ten degrees or more. It is even more amazing when you
stop to think that a neuron is basically a little sack of salt water,”
Bonds said.
Until recently, attempts to study interactions between groups of
neurons have been hindered by the fact that researchers were limited to
using single microelectrodes to measure electrical activity. Although
this technique does a superb job of recording the electrical activity
of one or two neurons, attempts to use it to record the activity of a
larger number of neurons at the same time has had limited success. (The
other method major method for mapping brain activity – functional MRI –
measures chemical changes in the brain, not electrical ones, so it
cannot be used for this purpose.)
Samonds and Bonds used a new technology that employs an array of 100
microelectrodes, which can monitor the activity of dozens of neurons at
a time. The researchers used this array to monitor the activity of
neurons in the visual center of heavily anaesthetized cats. (The same
basic technology was recently approved for clinical trials in paralyzed
patients. The goal is to determine if the chip can be implanted in a
way that will allow them to control a computer with their thoughts.)
When the subjects were presented with grid patterns at different
orientations, the researchers found that groups of about six neurons
would synchronize their firing rate for different orientations and that
these groups exhibited an ability to discriminate between variations in
orientation as small as two degrees, about five times better than
individual cells.
“The size of the groups that we can observe was limited by the size of
the electrode array,” said Samonds. “Currently, we can monitor about 50
neurons at a time. Synchronization among larger groups should allow
higher levels of precision, but we don’t have enough data yet to
predict the number of cells necessary to achieve the level of
discrimination that many animals possess.”
The researchers also have found that gamma waves – the 30 to 60 Hertz
waves that appear everywhere in the brain – may play a key role in this
mechanism. They have determined that the neurons respond to a new
pattern by synchronizing their activity. When the gamma oscillations
are present, the synchronization is maintained 100 percent of the time,
but when gamma waves are not present, the synchronization breaks down
within a few seconds.
The study was supported by a grant from the National Institutes of Health.
Posted 5/19/04