Light From Without, Light From Within
Posted: under Consciousness, Personal Notes.
Tags: Consciousness, electrode recording, fMRI, hippocampus, human cognition, memory, mental world, rat cognition
Two articles last month describe the relationship between inner mental worlds and the activity of specific neurons in the region of the brain called the hippocampus. But one article reports an experiment with rats and the other with humans.
The first piece in the Journal Neuron was reported in ScienceDaily. Researchers at the University of Minnesota Medical School recorded the brain activity in the hippocampus—where memories are formed—of rats trained on a maze to learn to follow two routes, designated A and B, to obtain food.
The rats wore electrode hats while they learned the maze. The scientists pinned down which hippocampal neurons, called “place cells,” fired in association with locations along each route. And they determined the firing sequences of the place cells for each route.
They got a surprise when the place cells firing while the rats were moving along one route weren’t necessarily the ones associated with that route. The following is from the ScienceDaily report:
The researchers found that the animals would replay sequence B more often, even when they spent most of their time running sequence A. In other words, the researchers found that the rats were most likely to replay the path they had experienced less often. … [Also, they] were able to observe the animal making connections between paths that it had never physically traveled before. For example, if the animal had physically traveled from point A to point B, and from point B to point C, but never from point A to point C, they observed the single sequence A to B to C during the replay process, implying that the rat’s brain was able to make the connection between points A and C on its internal map.
Neuroscientists at University College London performed the human experiment, which was published in Cell Biology and reported in Science online. They obtained fMRIs of the subjects hippocampuses rather than use electrodes. These real time, high resolution fMRIs recorded regional blood flow, which is assumed to reflect neuronal activity.
The researchers showed the volunteers three 7-second movies of an actress doing simple things, such as dropping a letter in a mailbox. The subjects were asked to memorize what they saw. They recorded the fMRIs of each subject while this was happening. Later the subjects were asked to choose one of the movies and recall it, while also undergoing fMRIs.
A computer, programmed with an algorithm to analyze the fMRIs, was able to determine which movies the subjects were remembering. In other words, using the algorithm, the computer had correctly picked out which neurons fired in association with which internal scene.
In my view, the two studies—in two different species of mammals—found approximately the same thing. Both studies provided evidence of the creatures’ mental worlds. And both support the notion that the mental projection of internal representations is associated with the activities of hippocampal neurons, a region of the brain known to work with memories.
For some of us humans, the most astonishing aspect might be the evidence provided that rats have mental worlds just as humans do.
There is for me also another, deeper significance in the results of these two research efforts. They both support the existence of non-material mental worlds.
Both the rats and the humans experienced internal mental representations. The initial inputs for the representations originated externally to the organisms, and the recalled ones originated internally to the organisms. In the case of the rats, the external inputs came from the maze where the animals trained, and the internal ones came from their hippocampuses. In the human case, the external inputs came from the movies they watched, and the internal ones came also from their hippocampuses.
I find it fascinating to consider what may be common and what may be different in regard to the two types of source—the external sources and the internal ones. In a previous post, I wrote about one thing they have in common: The information from both sources, the external and the internal, is carried by photons.
Photons carry the electromagnetic waves of light, and they also are the vectors of the electromagnetic force. The external-source photons were those of the light waves striking the retinas of the animals. The internal-source photons were those of the electrical impulses of the activity of the hippocampal neurons in the brain.
I’ve suggested that the existence of non-material, mental (conscious) representations can be considered within science, specifically within quantum mechanics. Non-material, conscious experiences exist, I believe, as the wave functions (state vectors) of the photons involved. Wave functions are non-material things just as mental experiences are. That’s one main reason for my suggestion that this is the case.
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Apr 05 2010