Ume'å physiologists describe a new principle for information coding in the nervous systemJanuary 20, 2004How does the nervous system code, transmit, and process the information that steers our behaviour? Ronald S. Johansson's research team at Ume'å University in Sweden is now publishing its discovery of a new principle for this. The prevailing view is that information is coded and transmitted by variations in the number of nerve impulses per time unit in the fibres of the nerve cells, that is, as a frequency code. Johansson's research team at the Section for Physiology present in the journal Nature Neuroscience a new principle for how information is coded and transmitted in the nervous system. When we manipulate objects, the brain reacts more quickly to the form of the objects and the direction of the contact forces than would be possible with frequency coding of information from the sensory organs of the fingertips. Frequency coding would require that the individual nerve fibre would have time to signal at least two impulses, and to interpret the message the brain needs to monitor signal traffic for a considerable period of time. The team of scientists is now demonstrating that the information is effectively coded on the basis of the very first nerve impulse occurring in the nerve fibres that are excited when the fingertip contacts objects. The time gap between the first nerve impulses that occur in the signaling nerve fibres convey the information more rapidly that frequency codes-and fast enough to explain the role of the tactile sense in steering the fine motor movements of the hand. In experiments carried out on conscious volunteers, signals were registered in individual nerve fibres running from the tactile organs of the fingertips to the spinal cord and brain stem. In August 2003, Roland S. Johansson published an article in Nature together with a Canadian visiting researcher. It dealt with how the brain can understand the actions of other individuals. In the new article in Nature Neuroscience, appearing online in January, his co-author is one of his previous doctoral candidates, Ingvars Birznieks, who defended his thesis in 2003 at the Section for Physiology. VetenskapsrĂ„det (The Swedish Research Council) |
|||||||||||||||||||||
Science Research Departments
Earth Science Alternative Energy | Anthropology and Archaeology | Earthquakes and Volcanoes | Environment and Nature News | Global Warming | High-Energy and Particle Physics | Ozone Hole | Scientists Slow Light | Tsunami Space Science Astronomy and Space News | Black Holes | Chandra X-Ray Observatory | Extrasolar Planets | Hubble Telescope | International Space Station | Jupiter Galileo Mission | Jupiter Cassini Mission Flyby | Mars Exploration | Mars Odyssey 2001 | Mars Global Surveyor | Mars Polar Lander | Mars Climate Orbiter | Mars Pathfinder | Meteors and Asteroids | Mir Space Station | NEAR Asteroid Probe Mission | Pluto Planet Debate | Search for Extraterrestrial Life | Space Shuttle Program | Space Shuttle Mission: STS-102 | Space Weather Life Science Animal News | Biotechnology and Genetics | Brain Research | Human Cloning | Dinosaur and Fossil Discoveries | Endangered Species | Gene Therapy | Genetically Modified Food | Stem Cell Research | Whales and Whaling |
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||