A new study has revealed that individual neurons in the human brain are triggered by the subject's conscious perception, rather than by the visual stimulus. |
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An international team of scientists has shown how individual neurons in the human brain react to ambiguous morphed faces. The study found neurons fire in line with conscious recognition of images rather than the actual images seen, and points to a clear role for neurons in the formation of memory.
The paper, ‘Single-Cell Responses to Face Adaptation in the Human Medial Temporal Lobe’, was published in the journal Neuron.
For this, the researchers including Professor Rodrigo Quian Quiroga, director of the Centre for Systems Neuroscience and Head of Bioengineering at the University of Leicester, used images of celebrities, such as Angelina Jolie and Halle Berry, morphed together to create an ambiguous face which test subjects were asked to identify.
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They concluded that neurons fire in line with conscious recognition of images rather than the actual images seen. Furthermore, in most cases the neuron’s responses to morphed pictures were the same as when shown the pictures without morphing.
The study was carried out by Quiroga at Leicester, Alexander Kraskov from University College London, Christof Koch at the Allen Institute for Brain Science, Florian Mormann at the University of Bonn and Itzhak Fried at the University of California Los Angeles.
Professor Quiroga said: “We are constantly bombarded with noisy and ambiguous sensory information and our brain is constantly making decisions based on such limited data.”
"This result supports the view that these neurons are play a key role in the formation of memory." |
“In a sense, the interpretation of this result goes way back to British Empiricism and even to Aristotle. As Aristotle put it, we create images of the external world and use these images rather than the sensory stimulus itself for our thoughts. These neurons encode exactly that.”
“This result supports the view that these neurons are play a key role in the formation of memory.”
SOURCE University of Leicester
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