Summary: Findings shed light on how plastic and stable neural populations are able to co-exist in the brain.
Source: University of Cambridge
Our brains are highly skilled at learning patterns in the world and making sense of them. The brain continually learns and adapts throughout our lives, and even the neurons supporting learned behaviors, such as the daily walk to work, are constantly changing.
This “representational drift” occurs without any obvious change in behavior or task performance. Everything seems routine and stable, i.e., you follow the same path to work, make the same plan and take the same steps, but all the while, patterns of neural activity in certain parts of the brain are changing.
A new study, published in the journal PNAS, proposes how the brain stays stable despite changes in the neural code.
Cambridge neuroscientists and study co-authors Dr. Michael E. Rule and Dr. Timothy O’Leary, argue that neurons (the cells that make your brain work) can detect when some of their inputs change, and adjust the strength of influence that one neuron has on another, in order to compensate, thus supporting a form of internal learning.
“These changes in the neural code bear similarities to how languages change gradually over time, while faithfully communicating common ideas and concepts,” says Dr. Rule, a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow in the Department of Engineering.
While some parts of the brain are plastic, and change rapidly, other parts show long-term stability. So how do neural circuits talk to each other without continuously having to re-learn the things that they have already learned? Even brain-machine interfaces—which are increasingly being used as assisted living devices for people with cognitive or physical impairments—must contend with “drift.”
Author: Press Office
Source: University of Cambridge
Contact: Press Office – University of Cambridge
Image: The image is credited to Michael E. Rule