Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Brain's mental compass relies on geometric relationships

Darpan News Desk IANS, 18 Oct, 2014 07:36 AM
    Do you know why you never miss the road that leads to your girlfriend's house? Give credit to your brain's mental compass.
     
    The brain has a complex system for keeping track of which direction you are facing as you move about, say researchers, adding that people use geometrical relationships to orient themselves.
     
    To test how the brain makes these inferences, the researchers designed an experiment in which they introduced participants to a virtual environment - a set of four museums in a park.
     
    They asked the participants to memorise the location of the everyday objects on display in those museums.
     
    They then scanned their brains while asking them to recall the spatial relationships between those objects.
     
    In the scans, the team focused on a brain region known as the retrosplenial complex.
     
    “The retrosplenial complex is very much underexplored. There are three ways the retrosplenial complex could conceivably encode this type of information and serve as part of a mental compass,” explained Russell Epstein, professor of psychology in University of Pennsylvania's school of arts and sciences.
     
    One way would be a “global” system in which the brain tracks the absolute direction one is facing regardless of visual cues in the environment.
     
    An “idiosyncratic” system, in which the brain keeps tracks of direction for each environment independently, was another possibility.
     
    Finally, researchers considered a “geometric” system that is based on more generalised relationships between features in an environment.
     
    “There, remembering that your desk is on the north wall of your office would involve recalling the relationship between the desk and the door - say, the desk is on the left when I enter the room - without having to specifically recall the room itself,” Epstein pointed out.
     
    The research, which is related to the work that won this year’s Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, adds new dimensions to our understanding of spatial memory and how it helps us to build memories of events, the study concluded.
     
    The paper appeared in the journal Nature Neuroscience.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    For DINK couples, outsourcing parenthood is cool

    For DINK couples, outsourcing parenthood is cool
    For double-income-no-kid (DINK) couples, raising a child is the most difficult part. For them, creches and day-care centres in the marketplace are no less...

    For DINK couples, outsourcing parenthood is cool

    Close relationships the basis of stress-free life

    Close relationships the basis of stress-free life
    We all know that deep and meaningful relationships play a vital role in one's overall well-being but still, most of us are bereft of emotional bonding in life...

    Close relationships the basis of stress-free life

    Gas Or Electric, One Oven Or Two? Questions Pondered When Purchasing New Stove

    Gas Or Electric, One Oven Or Two? Questions Pondered When Purchasing New Stove
    VICTORIA - When a homeowner is building or renovating the kitchen, one of the most important decisions for the heart of the home revolves around the stovetop and oven.

    Gas Or Electric, One Oven Or Two? Questions Pondered When Purchasing New Stove

    Decoded: What makes an angry face

    Decoded: What makes an angry face
    Also include thinned lips and flared nostrils as researchers have identified the origin and purpose of the facial expression for anger that is universal....

    Decoded: What makes an angry face

    'Thank you' turns new acquaintance into friends

    'Thank you' turns new acquaintance into friends
    Thanking a new acquaintance for their help makes them more likely to seek an ongoing social relationship with you, a new study indicates....

    'Thank you' turns new acquaintance into friends

    Couples who smoke marijuana together a happier lot?

    Couples who smoke marijuana together a happier lot?
    Similar to a drinking relationship, married couples who smoke marijuana together are less likely to be engaged in domestic violence, says research.

    Couples who smoke marijuana together a happier lot?