This is a really cool study. Very unique. This has a lot of potential if it 
pans out.

larry

http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/86499.php
Brain Waves That Distinguish False Memories From Real Ones Pinpointed
24 Oct 2007   

For the first time, researchers at the University of Pennsylvania are able to 
pinpoint brain waves that distinguish true from false memories, providing a 
better understanding of how memory works and creating a new strategy to help 
epilepsy patients retain cognitive function.

The study, the first to show that brain waves predict the veracity of human 
memories, is available online in the journal Psychological Science and in the 
November 2007 print edition.

To test whether distinct patterns of electrophysiological activity prior to a 
response can distinguish true from false memories, psychologists at Penn 
recorded brain activity from 52 neurosurgical patients being treated for 
drug-resistant epilepsy. Patients were asked to perform a verbal free-recall 
task while researchers used an array of implanted electrodes and intracranial 
electroencephalographic recordings to locate where in their brains the 
patients' seizures originated. Patients volunteered to study lists of words 
which they were then asked to recall at a later time. When asked to recall the 
studied words, participants recalled some number of correct items and also made 
a small number of errors, recalling words that had not appeared on the target 
list.

While patients performed the memory game, scientists observed electrical 
activity in their brains to determine whether specific brain waves were 
associated with successfully storing and retrieving memories. Researchers found 
that a fast brain wave, known as the gamma rhythm, increased when participants 
studied a word that they would later recall. The same gamma waves, whose 
voltage rises and fall between 50 and 100 times per second, also increased in 
the half-second prior to participant's correctly recalling an item.

"These analyses revealed that the same pattern of gamma band oscillatory 
activity in the hippocampus, prefrontal cortex and left temporal lobe that 
predicts successful memory formation also re-emerged at retrieval, 
distinguishing correct from incorrect responses," said Per B. Sederberg, lead 
author and former Penn neuroscientist now performing post-doctoral research at 
Princeton University. The timing of these oscillatory effects suggests that 
self-cued memory retrieval initiates in the hippocampus and then spreads to the 
cortex. Thus, retrieval of true as compared with false memories induces a 
distinct pattern of gamma oscillations, possibly reflecting recollection of 
contextual information associated with past experience.

"Gamma waves actually predicted whether or not an item that was about to be 
recalled was previously studied," said Michael Kahana, a professor of 
psychology in Penn's School of Arts and Sciences and lead investigator. "In 
other words, one could see a difference in brain activity just prior to 
remembering something that had and had not actually happened."

In addition to providing a better understanding of how memory works, the 
findings may also provide a clearer picture of how to assist those suffering 
with epilepsy. In epilepsy's 2.6 million American sufferers, brain oscillations 
become so strong that they sweep across the brain, producing seizures. Although 
seizures are controlled with medication in two-thirds of people with epilepsy, 
the remainder may be candidates for surgery to remove the brain regions where 
seizures originate.

"Identifying the neural signatures of successful memory storage and retrieval 
can help neurosurgeons reduce the cognitive deficits that might result from 
epilepsy surgery," said Brian Litt, associate professor of neurology and 
bioengineering at Penn, and a co-author of the study.

In addition, these techniques for mapping cognitive networks could give rise to 
better ways of mapping functional networks in brain, which may help in treating 
a number of neurological disorders, including depression, schizophrenia, head 
trauma and affective disorders, Litt said.

----------------------------
Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
----------------------------

A collaboration of psychologists, neurologists and neurosurgeons from the 
University of Pennsylvania, Princeton University, the University of Freiburg 
and Harvard Medical School participated in this research, which was funded by 
the National Institutes of Health, the Swartz Foundation, the Klingenstein 
Foundation and the Dana Foundation.

Source: Jordan Reese
University of Pennsylvania

Article URL: http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/86499.php



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|
Create robust enterprise, web RIAs.
Upgrade to ColdFusion 8 and integrate with Adobe Flex
http://www.adobe.com/products/coldfusion/flex2/?sdid=RVJP

Archive: 
http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/CF-Community/message.cfm/messageid:245499
Subscription: http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/CF-Community/subscribe.cfm
Unsubscribe: http://www.houseoffusion.com/cf_lists/unsubscribe.cfm?user=89.70.5

Reply via email to