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Past Fresh Scientists
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How brains go from digital to analogue24 June 2008Electrical communication in the brain works not only like a digital computer, but also like analogue tape. How this occurs has been unravelled by researchers at The Australian National University’s John Curtin School of Medical Research. Their studies suggest that the brain operates in a much more sophisticated manner than being purely digital, and their insight could lead to a better understanding of brain disorders such as epilepsy. The brain undertakes remarkably complex tasks orchestrated by more than 100 billion nerve cells. Each nerve cell can be considered as a communication device, like a telephone, connected to other nerve cells by cables known as axons. Traditionally it was thought that the signals in the axons came in the form of all-or-none electrical impulses, called “action potentials”. And the analogy of the brain as a computer arose from the idea that the brain uses only this “digital” form of communication. “It has been known for a long time that single nerve cells generate (digital) action potentials and forward these signals rapidly to other cells,” says Maarten Kole, an ANU research fellow. “While this is a key step in nerve cell communication, researchers have been unable to explain how and where in the nerve cell these signals are generated, or even why?” The researchers recorded the local electrical activity generated in the axon, the main output region of nerve cells. “Although this work was technically challenging, it was worth the effort. The results revealed to us an unknown realm of complexity.” The complexity arises from the precise location and properties of the channels in the axon membrane which allow the flow of electrically charged ions into and out of nerve cells. This is what underlies the generation of electrical activity in the brain. What the researchers found was that the pattern of opening of the channels in time and space can influence the form of the signal. So, at the point where the signals are generated, they can take different forms—some were very brief sharp spikes, like a typical digital impulse, others were of longer duration. Until now it has been assumed that action potentials were digital events with information conveyed in their number and timing, similar to the all-or-none nature of transistors in computers. In contrast, analogue systems represent signals changing continuously. The new findings indicate how signalling in nerve cells can take both digital and analogue forms. “We not only saw that nerve impulses are able to send out signals in an analogue manner, but we also found this could be perceived by neighbouring nerve cells if located close enough.” The more closely cells are connected to each other, the more information can be received from the analogue signal. By continuing these studies of the region of nerve cells where electrical activity originates, Maarten hopes to obtain useful insights into brain disorders, such as epilepsy, when synchronised electrical activity is spread through nerve networks in an uncontrolled and hyperactive manner. Maarten Kole is one of 16 early-career scientists chosen for Fresh Science, a national program sponsored by the Federal and Victorian governments. Media contacts: Maarten Kole on 0405 469086, maarten.kole@anu.edu.au; Sarah Brooker on 0413 332 489; and Niall Byrne on 0417 131 977 or niall@freshscience.org Photos and background at www.freshscience.org To read the background to this report, view here. For images, view here. [Press release] Background
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Media contacts:
Niall Byrne 0417 131 977 and Sarah Brooker 0413 332 489
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