Monday, August 18, 2014

Scientists Have Located the Brain's On/Off Switch for Consciousness






 It does sound as if turning oneself off will become a viable option and taking this further, we cannot be too far from allowing parts of the brain to simply sleep while the rest continues to operate. This remains an accidental first step but it is powerfully indicative.


Right now we operate under nature's own programing and that was for radically different conditions. There is plenty of obvious improvements we will want to test out. Plenty here to consider.


In the meantime there must be a way to tap this effect without those electrodes.


Scientists Have Located the Brain's On/Off Switch for Consciousness

Robert Sorokanich

Yesterday 9:00am


Every one of us loses consciousness on a daily basis: it's called sleep. But scientists have never understood which part of the brain controls when you're conscious and when you're not. Now,researchers seem to have found it by coincidence while studying an epileptic patient—and used electronic brain stimulation to flip the switch on and off.


As New Scientist reports, researchers at George Washington University were using deep brain electrodes to monitor brain signals and try to pinpoint the area of a patient's brain that was causing her seizures. One of the electrodes was placed on the claustrum, a thin sheet of neuronsrunning between major structures of the brain—and a region that's never been studied with deep brain electrodes before.


Unexpectedly, when the researchers sent high frequency electrical signals to the claustrum, the patient lost consciousness: unlike a seizure, where a person's activity immediately stops, the patient seemed to "slow down," speaking more quietly and moving more slowly until she was silent and still, unresponsive to voice or visual stimulation. She was, by definition, unconscious, regaining full consciousness with no memory of the event as soon as the electrical stimulation was turned off.


The discovery has huge potential implications for patients with epilepsy or in semi-conscious states, but this is a very early stage: so far, this on/off switch has only been tested in one patient. But pinpointing where consciousness is located in the brain will be crucial to deeper understanding of how the brain works, as researcher Christof Koch told New Scientist:


Ultimately, if we know how consciousness is created and which parts of the brain are involved then we can understand who has it and who doesn't. Do robots have it? Do fetuses? Does a cat or dog or worm? This study is incredibly intriguing but it is one brick in a large edifice of consciousness that we're trying to build.


Maybe someday, we'll fall asleep by flipping the OFF switch located deep within our brains. [New Scientist]


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