Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Brain knows what is virtual or real: Study

Darpan News Desk IANS, 26 Nov, 2014 11:14 AM
  • Brain knows what is virtual or real: Study
 Neurons in the brain react differently to virtual reality than they do to real-life environments, shows a study.
 
The finding can be significant for people who use virtual reality for gaming, military, commercial, scientific or other purposes.
 
"The pattern of activity in a brain region involved in spatial learning in the virtual world is completely different than when it processes activity in the real world," said Mayank Mehta, a professor of physics, neurology and neurobiology at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA).
 
For the study, Mehta led a team focusing on the hippocampus - a region of the brain involved in diseases such as Alzheimer's, stroke, depression, schizophrenia, epilepsy and post-traumatic stress disorder.
 
To test whether the hippocampus could actually form spatial maps using only visual landmarks, the researchers devised a non-invasive virtual reality environment.
 
They studied how the hippocampal neurons in the brains of rats reacted in the virtual world without the ability to use smells and sounds as cues.
 
The scientists were surprised to find that the results from the virtual and real environments were entirely different.
 
"The neural pattern in virtual reality is substantially different from the activity pattern in the real world. We need to fully understand how virtual reality affects the brain," Mehta noted.
 
When people walk or try to remember something, the activity in the hippocampus becomes very rhythmic.
 
Those rhythms facilitate the formation of memories and our ability to recall them.
 
Mehta hypothesizes that in some people with learning and memory disorders, these rhythms are impaired.
 
By retuning and synchronising these rhythms, doctors will be able to repair damaged memory as "the need to repair memories is enormous," he concluded.
 
The study was published in the journal Nature Neuroscience.

MORE Interesting ARTICLES

Post a 'sick selfie' to get office leave!

Post a 'sick selfie' to get office leave!
"Showing off a hangover and to prove illness to friends or co-workers emerged as the most common reasons for uploading a...

Post a 'sick selfie' to get office leave!

Break-ups can shoo away your Twitter followers

Break-ups can shoo away your Twitter followers
They tracked these users from November 2013 to April 2014, filtered the data and arrived at a group of 661 pairs, who had been in...

Break-ups can shoo away your Twitter followers

Miracles Do Happen: Man presumed dead is alive

Miracles Do Happen: Man presumed dead is alive
In a rare incident, a man presumed killed by Ebola in Liberia regained consciousness when he was lifted into a body bag by a burial team, it was reported Sunday....

Miracles Do Happen: Man presumed dead is alive

In pain? You are likelier to spot pain-related words more often

In pain? You are likelier to spot pain-related words more often
If you are suffering from chronic pain, there are chances that you would pay more attention to words like ache, agony, distress and pain than to non-pain...

In pain? You are likelier to spot pain-related words more often

Modesty holding women back at work: Study

Modesty holding women back at work: Study
Do you find yourself holding back in conversations and hiding your true credentials? Ladies, it's time to make a change and banish the barriers and be...

Modesty holding women back at work: Study

Parents could drive car choices of kids

Parents could drive car choices of kids
What brand of car you drive may influence the car choices of your kids too, says a study.

Parents could drive car choices of kids