Thursday, January 25, 2007

Thinking with Spinal Cord . . .

Filed under: Neurology

The old joke goes that "God gave men two brains, but not enough blood to run both at the same time." Har Har Har. Well, new intriguing research suggests that we tend to "think" with spinal cords too.

Two scientists from the University of Copenhagen have demonstrated that the spinal cord use network mechanisms similar to those used in the brain. The discovery is featured in the current issue of Science.

The research group behind the surprising results consists of Professor Jørn Hounsgaard and Post.doc Rune W. Berg from the University of Copenhagen, and Assistant Professor and PhD Aidas Alaburda from the University of Vilnius. The group has shown that spinal neurons, during network activity underlying movements, show the similar irregular firing patterns as seen in the cerebral cortex.

New approach

"Our findings contradict conventional wisdom about spinal cord functions," says Rune W. Berg from Department of Neuroscience and Pharmacology at the Faculty of Health Sciences.

Until now, the general belief was that the spinal networks functioned mechanically and completely without random impulses. The new discovery enables researchers to use the theory on cortical networks to explore how spinal cords generate movements.

Still puzzled by movement

How humans are able to move at all remains a puzzle. Our muscles are controlled by thousands of nerve cells in the spinal cord. This entire, complex system must work as a whole in order to successfully create a single motion. The new research shows that even if we repeat a certain motion with high accuracy, the involved nerve cells never repeat their activity patterns. This particular observation reflects the organisation of the nerve cells of the cerebral cortex.

Press release at the University of Copenhagen. . .

Full paper (.pdf) at Science. . .

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replies: 1 comments
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This is consistent with the same problem in the brain. Nerves learn, and despite or because of the butterfly effect, the second occurrence of an event (motion or thought), is affected (associated with, or influenced by) by the 'memory' of the first occurance.
Therefor, no event is experienced the same way twice, always changed by the slightest changes in circumstance and experience.
I've thought about the ephrmeral nature of experience before, but this provides an interesting (physiological) perspective.
Thank you


Posted by: JRB
on February 23, 2007 08:36 AM GMT

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