25 oktober 2008

I will give You my wife ?????

HILARIOUS !!! Thanks to Rik DL for pointing this one out. GREAT !

Tim Minchin - If You Open Your Mind Too Much...(yours brains can fall out)

read the words but above all see the video

Lyrics to If You Open Your Mind Too Much, Your Brains Will Fall Out (Take My Wife) :

If anyone can show me one example in the history of the world of a single Psychic who has been able to prove under reasonable experimental conditions that they are able to read minds

And if anyone can show me one example in the history of the world of a single Astrologer who has been able to prove under reasonable experimental conditions that they can predict events by interpreting celestial signs

And if anyone can show me one example in the history of the world of a single Homeopathic Practitioner who has been able to prove under reasonable experimental conditions that solutions made of infinitely tiny particles of good stuff dissolved repeatedly into relatively huge quantities of water has a consistently higher medicinal value than a similarly administered placebo

And if anyone can show me just one example in the history of the world of a single Spiritual or religious person who has been able to prove either logically or empirically the existence of a higher power that has any consciousness or interest in the human race or ability to punish or reward humans for there moral choices or that there is any reason - other than fear - to believe in any version of an afterlife

I’ll give you my piano, one of my legs, and my wife

BCI video's crazy and normal

Lots of BCI stuff.... (video's)

Mismatching in Budapest

During the past 30 years, the Mismatch Negativity (MMN) event related brain potential (ERP) has become one of the prime electrophysiological tools in studying perception, memory, and attention, as well as high level cognitive processes, such as understanding speech and music. As a consequence, the development and modeling of MMN and applications of MMN for detecting and monitoring cerebral and psychological dysfunctions have also received increasing attention. The series of meetings, which started in Helsinki in 1998, with the most recent one held in Cambridge in 2006 have successfully covered the ever widening range of research topics the study of which has benefited from the use of the MMN method (see the Table of Contents of the Special MMN Issue of the Journal of Psychophysiology created from presentations at the Cambridge meeting) The upcoming meeting in 2009 in Budapest, organized by the Institute for Psychology, Hungarian Academy of Sciences will aim at continuing this tradition. We wish to provide a forum for presenting new results and theories and for discussing all aspects of neuroscience and psychology, clinical as well as basic research, to which MMN studies contributed. We also wish to keep the meeting especially accessible to students.

23 oktober 2008

15 oktober 2008

Meet Fred: the man, the mentor !

A wonderfull man that everybody would like as a friend and mentor.

EEG and dq fractal dimension

A very interesting article by Fred Abraham. Must read ! Terry Marks-Tarlow mentioned this article on CHAOPSYC, the discussion listserver at UVM owned by me, David Houston, and Bob Porter and shared with the Society for Chaos Theory in Psychology and the Life Sciences (and open to all). I inquired about this paper because I wondered what kind of metabolic measures that she mentioned might have the temporal-spatial resolution necessary to answer the kinds of questions on cognition that Terry was concerned with. Terry later told me it was EEG, not metabolic measures, so my initial inquiry was already answered, as I am familiar with EEG. However, the article seemed to offer innovational data-analytical and graphic methods that deserve a more careful exmination This review represents my inquiry into the issues involved. It was a challenge due to my mathematical limitations, and should be considered as raising questions, not as an authoritative critique. I suggest ways to develop its usefulness based on my own ideas and on those of Sprott. read on....

12 oktober 2008

Kolmogorov, Dickens and Schakespeare

It's about compressing art. is that possible ? Ask Newton ! read here...."no one would argue that they compare in anyway to Dickens, much less Shakespeare. Given that the Kolmogorov complexity is uncomputable we can never know for sure if art is compressible. So a challenge to computer scientists is to write a program that can generate literature with a program shorter than the work itself". Intrigued ?? Get the whole story...

Discover the neuron

A mighty tribute to Sir Neuron on this blog. Worth reading...... nice iconography. Santiago Y Cajal would have liked it.

Academia & Big Pharma

Big Pharma and academia becoming more and more cozy. Academia and drug companies really like one another. Sure, the latter always loved the former, since collaborating with university-based scientists often made the publications arising from the private sector look a little more legit. On the contrary, the reciprocity in this relationship has not always been there. There is without a doubt some sub-disciplinary differences in this complex relationship, but in the basic science departments that I lurked around, if you were associated with a company (or worse, left academia for a position there, succumbing to the power of the Dark Side), there was always talk of whether or not you could be trusted. Because companies need publications to prove the legitimacy of their product, right? And the legitimacy determines how much money everyone makes, right? So with such conflicts of interest, could the scientist, or the data being produced by these people, be trusted? read on......

10 oktober 2008

rTMS gets FDA approval

Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), a method of non-invasively stimulating the brain, has just recently gained clearance for the treatment of major depression. This is one of the first FDA clearances of TMS for a brain disorder. TMS has actually been around quite some time (since 1985) and has shown considerable promise for treating a variety of brain disorders. TMS has been used by scientists to deactivate or activate specific regions of the brain's outer layer (the neocortex) by sending multiple electromagnetic pulses through a person's skull using a TMS device. These electromagnetic pulses are able to create an electric current in a very targeted brain region. This electric current can then cause either an inhibition or an excitation of the underlying brain tissue depending on which frequency of the TMS pulse that is used. High frequency electromagnetic pulses are able to excite brain tissue while lower frequency pulses tend to decrease brain activity. So specific brain regions may be selectively activated or deactivated. Brain disorders often have hyperactive or hypoactive activity in specific regions, and TMS is able to selectively adjust this brain activity non-invasively.

Homeopathy: respons (dutch)

Aim at the stars but keep Your brain from drifting away
In zijn hommage aan de alternatieve geneeswijzen (lezersbrief AK di 7 oct 2008) - in het bijzonder de homeopathie- noteert collega Jan de Vuyst, kinderarts en -uit wat ik lees- hoogstwaarschijnlijk zelf een overtuigd homeopathie afficionado, dat het verdedigen van “mijn stelling” namelijk “dat de werkzaamheid van de homeopathie niet wetenschappelijk bewezen is”, geen erg grote inspanning vergt. Hij zou nogal eens verschieten van de tijd die in dergelijke verdediging moet geinvesteerd worden en waar velen mij proberen te overtuigen dat het wellicht een betere zaak waardig is. Hoewel, uit wat volgt zal blijken dat op de bres blijven staan tegen onwetenschappelijk denken geen overbodige luxe is. Verder wil hij mij, als een attente collega behoeden, voor wat hij een cruciale fout tegen de wetenschap acht nl “beweren dat iets niet werkt omdat we het werkingsmechanisme ervan niet kennen”. Ik ben hem dankbaar voor deze aanwijzing maar stel hem gerust dat dit risico vrij gering is. Beide bekommernissen zijn namelijk gemakkelijk te weerleggen. Ten eerste gaat het niet om “MIJN stelling” maar om een concrete algemene “vaststelling” (tot op heden wetenschappelijk nog niet tegengesproken) dat er geen enkel overtuigend bewijs geleverd is dat homeopathie een intrinsiek effect zou hebben dat niet kan toegeschreven worden aan placebo. Ik verwijs naar Cochrane of andere respositoria van grote metastudies en EBM gevalideerd onderzoek en vraag hem dan ook vriendelijk om mij aan de hand van concrete referenties en data het tegendeel te bewijzen. Ik vrees, samen met Ernst en Singh dat hem een een lange en frustrerend vruchteloze zoektocht te wachten staat. Feit: er is geen enkele overtuigende EBM gebaseerde studie die van om het even welke alternatieve geneeswijze of ze nu 2000 dan wel 200 jaar oud is kan aantonen dat ze een effect heeft die placebo of placebo plus overschrijdt. Daarom en tot nader inziens beschouw ik alternatieve geneeskunde als een filosofisch denksysteem omtrent ziekte en gezondheid dat evenwel bij persisterend gebrek aan een slotvast EBM ISO bewijs van intrinsieke werking, niet binnen het wetenschappelijk kader van moderne geneeskunde kan ingelijfd worden. Om die reden vezet ik mij zeer krachtig tegen de schijnbaar onschuldige maar semantisch erg dubbelzinnige benaming “CAM”. Het woord complementair is een misplaatste wat propagandistische manier om op amper verholen wijze alternatieve beoefenaars zonder degelijke geloofsbrieven een toga van wetenschappelijke accepteerbaarheid om de schouders te hangen of hen toch een vaag vluchtig odium van validiteit te geven. Dergelijhke parfum blijft al snel hangen. Vooral artsen die de homeopathie “kunst” beoefenen maken zich daar willens nillens schuldig aan. Ook al sprak immers collega Georges Alberteyn te Antwerpen erg vaderlijke verzoenende woorden, tot nader orde staat er in de eed van hippocrates zowel als in de regels van de Orde nog steeds ingeschreven dat geneeskunde enkel mag uitgeoefend worden binnen de stand van de actuele wetenschappelijke kennis. (en niet op basis van geloof of filosofische overtuiging). Homeopathie valt daar duidelijk buiten. Het zijn dergelijke sluikwegen en achterpoortjes die men in de reguliere wetenschap nu eenmaal moet gesloten houden voor diegenen die bewust of uit naieve onwetendheid de spelregels met de voeten treden ongeacht hoe vriendelijk, beleefd, goed bedoelend , holistisch of hoffelijk ze als mens en arts ook mogen zijn. Dit heeft niets te maken met intolerantie of fanatisme enkel met princiepes van eerlijke wetenschapsbeoefening. Willen alternatieven meespelen op het wetenschappelijk front en de erkenning krijgen die ze wel degelijk sterk ambieren (cfr wet Colla) dan moeten ze zich er ook bewijzen volgens de regels die gelden voor iedereen en niet steevast proberen via demagogie , lobbying en manipulatie van politiek, brave BV’s (zelfs van koninklijken bloede) of postmodernistische media de complementaire held uit te hangen. Vooral homeopathie is hier mijns inziens bewust onetisch bezig. De probabilistische onmogelijkheid dat ook maar één enkele molekule van een “actief” bestanddeel nog zou kunnen aanwezig zijn in de ultrahoge verdunningen die de homeopathie hanteert, voert de homeopathen ertoe fatasmagorische verklaringsmodellen te koesteren die inderdaad haaks staan op alle wetten van chemie en fysica waarop gans onze westerse kennis, wetenschap en techniek gefundeerd is. De term daarvoor luidt: pseudowetenschap en de gehanteerde modellen zijn ten andere niets meer dan een amalgaam van geleerd ogende termen die ze zelf schaamteloos en niet door enige kennis omkaderd geplagieerd hebben uit de reguliere wetenschap (de kleren van de keizer) om ze nadien ter verbijstering of verbluffing voor de bewonderende ogen van de goedgelovige patient door elkaar te schudden tot een semantisch troebel brouwsel van kwantrum dynamica , subatomaire krachtvelden en geheugen van gedynamiseerd water etc. Snake oil in volle glorie. De elan vital van Bergson van de zolder gehaald, afgestoft en opgelost in homeopatisch verdund en dynamisch geschud hippocampussap. Moet er nog zand zijn ? Dat er “interessante studies “zouden gepubliceerd omtrent deze ultra hoge verdunningen wil ik nog wel eens zien. Benveniste was ermee bezig maar bleek na deskun,dige tussenkomst van scepticus randi, volledig misleid. Als men Emoto bedoelt dan is dat met alle respect niets meer dan veredelde kwatsch. Ik heb er hier zelfs een boek voor mij liggen met als titel “Homeopathy Research: An Expedition Report” van P.C. Endler (gekregen van een collega homeopaat die het aankocht te Oostende en zo vriendelijk was het mij gratis op te sturen) waarin een aantal van deze “interessante” studies in detail ter sprake komen. Ik wil de vrijgevige collega niet kwetsen door schamper te doen over de inhoud van wat hij mij zo verwachtingsvol overmaakte, maar het ganse verhaal is een paternosterachtige aaneenschakeling van, fragmenten, foto’s, vrienden onder elkaar anecdotes, definities en cartoons. “Interessant”, “leuk en sympathiek” ongetwijfeld maar wetenschap wordt met andere pennen geschreven. “Interessant” als subjectief percept is dus absoluut niet voldoende om te overtuigen. “Extraordinairy claims need extraordinairy proof”. Dat is een wetenscahppelijk feit en helaas zie ik dat in de homeopathie niet gerealiseerd. Ik kan zeker respect opbrengen voor deze collegae die hun lange nascholingsuren besteden aan het bestuderen van allerlei alternatieve geneeswijzen maar zou hen toch erop willen wijzen dat ze zich zeer veel teleurstelling, tijdsverlies en misleiding kunnen besparen door voorafgaandelijk eens een degelijke cursus EBM te volgen. EBM en kritisch logisch denken wordt dan hun echte telescoop die hen zal toelaten de werkelijkheid van de suggestie te onderscheiden. . Wie de sterren wil zien doet er goed aan zijn lenzen te kuisen opdat het ware doel in het vi-zier zou komen. Hoe kan je immers de waarde van een studie beoordelen als je niet echt goed beseft wat de effecten zijn van onvoldoende blinding, subtiele fouten in selectie, inclusie, endpoints, randomisatie, covariante imbalance etc. .Moet je dan als arts alle kritische ingesteldheid zomaar pardoes achterwege laten om alles te gaan slikken wat een chinese guru of indische “meester” U vanuit zijn zgn eeuwenoude overlevering komt wijsmaken ? Ik geef grif toe dat statistiek en EBM (schijnbaar) wat saai en non holistisch klinken maar al die jaren van opleiding in acupressuur, punctuur, massage , homeopathie, reiki etc zijn mi totaal zinloos als je er niet in slaagt placebo van werkelijkheid te onderscheiden. Wie de waarheid wil zien moet begtinnen met een goede bril op te zetten en zeker het licht aan te steken. Blijven ronddolen in blinde kamers van alterneutische fantasie is niet erg productief en zal de wetenschappelijke geneeskunde geen zier vooruit helpen. Tenzij men ab initio maling heeft aan wetenschappelijke eerlijkheid en liever in romantische fenomenologische nevelen de zoektocht naar de heilige graal aangaat eerder dan op moedige wijze een helaas soms ontnuchterende waarheid onder de ogen te zien. Tegen de lyrische bevlogenheid van der junge Werther is EBM inderdaad maar een nuchtere meestergast. Want daar raken we de kern van het probleem. In tijden van angst, onzekerheid en controle verlies (en dat is ziekte en crisis altijd ) worden we als patient en zeker als empatisch betrokken arts geconfronteerd met de vaak ondraaglijke machteloosheid van het falen van onze moderne geneeskunde. We zijn dan snel geneigd de velden van onmacht in te vullen met illusies en onbewuste almachtsfantasie die we attribueren aan quasi mystico-magische potenties uit de oeroude tuinen van confusius en de suikerbollekes van Hahneman in het geloof ( het woord is inderdaad toepasselijk: geloof en hoop) dat deze ons op mysterieuze wijze de gezondheid zullen terugschenken. Elke rechtschapen arts weet dat de kriebelende twijfel “het zou eens moeten waar zijn zijn dat het toch werkt” op zo’n momenten een bijzonder sterke aantrekkingskracht kan hebben en ons instinct van onderzoeker en speurder snel kan gesolliciteerd worden om zonder logische remming de alterneutische lorelei roep te volgen. Wie daar op ingaat wapene zich best zeer goed. Cognitieve valstrikken en “logical fallacies” zitten handig verborgen in iedere hoek van dit meanderend pad en kunnen ons kritisch denken snel overmeesteren. Je ziet genoeg eminete academici die de Kackadorisprijs en sceptische put verdienen. Het is niet omdat we allemaal een mooi universitair diploma op zak hebben dat we genoeg gewapend zijn voor dergelijke tocht. De onderschatting van dit gevaar is het gevolg van een helaas zeer frequente overschatting van eigen kunnen die men bij vele academici ontmoet. Er is natuurlijk geen enkel bezwaar tegen nieuwschierigheid , exploratiedrang en brandend verlangen naar diepgaand onderzoek naar fundamentele wetten en diepe kennis ? Is dat nu net niet de “core business” van elke wetenschap ? Uiteraard wel. Het grote verschil (een wereld van verschil) zit hem in het feit dat elke vooruitgang in de reguliere wetenschap slechts mogelijk is door de strikte toepassing van de wetenschappelijke methode en dat geen enkele theorie ter wereld hoe uitdagend en mooi ze ook moge klinken deze methode kan omzeilen. Wetenschappers hebben de volle vrijheid de gekste hypotheses te exploreren maar weten dan ook deksels goed dat op het einde van de rit de bewijslast wel in hun kamp ligt en ze staalharde bewijzen zullen moeten brengen om hun terecht kritische collegae en peers van de waarachtigheid van hun stellingen te overtuigen. Daar is geen plaats voor anecdotische argumentaties, tevredenheidsindexen, “interessante publicaties”, economische voorkeuren of andere “hear-say” autoriteitsreferenties. Wie gelooft in de homeopathie of gelooft in het spagettimonster, elfjes en kabouters heeft daar het volste recht toe. Anderen geloven immers dat homeopathie een typisch voorbeeld is van een gedegenereerd pseudowetenschappelijke filosofisch denksysteem gefundeerd op cognitieve illusies en onderhouden door ontstellend gebrek aan statistisch logisch rationeel denken en EBM gestuurde onderzoeksmethodologie. Er is evenwel toch een dailog mogelijk en zelfs een uitkomst –gebaseerd op recente neurowetenschappelijke inzichten omtrent het placebo en het placebo plus effect maar zolang voor de homeopathen het woord placebo en recente wetenschappelijke inzichten daromtrent als een persoonlijke belediging blijven interpreteren is een constructieve dialoog inderdaad zeer moeilijk. Zoals mijn vrijgevige boekenschenkende collega in zijn laatste brief besloot : “ik denk dat tussen ons beiden de kloof te diep is” stel ik vast dat niet de diepte van de kloof maar de breedte bepalend is voor de overbrugbaarheid ervan. Neurowetenschap kan prachtige bruggen smeden maar mensen moeten bereid zijn tot echte dialoog en dus hun harry potter denken achterwege laten en van hun troon van gekwetst nholisme en onbegrepen martelaarschap verlaten.

09 oktober 2008

Mucho Brain No Myths

Much is said about the human brain but unfortunately a lot of what we believe is in fact false.  The following are 12 of the most common myths about the human brain that are simply not true.
1 The 10% myth
This has got to be number one on the list as it is arguably the most [...]


04 oktober 2008

Computational Neuroscience

Why Are Computational Neuroscience and Systems Biology So Separate?

Erik De Schutter1,2*

1 Computational Neuroscience Unit, Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology, Japan, 2 Theoretical Neurobiology, University of Antwerp, Antwerp, Belgium

Answer is here

Brain on DVD

Could You fit a Brain on a DVD ? Depends on Kolmogorov. Look what the Scientific Clearinghouse has to say. PS Interesting discussions here on Neurocomputing and math simulations.
The Kolmogorov complexity of an object is the length of the minimal description of that object. In terms of the brain, it would correspond to the length of the smallest computer program that could reproduce the brain. It could also be thought of as the amount of information necessary to model the brain. Computing the Kolmogorov complexity is not possible since it is an undecidable problem but we can estimate it. If we presume that molecular biology is computable then one estimate of the Kolmogorov complexity of the brain is given by the length of the genome, which is 3 billion base pairs long or 6 billion bits. To be conservative, we could also include the genome of the mother and baby, which implies 12 billion bits. This corresponds to less than two billion bytes and easily fits on a DVD. Hence in principle, we could potentially grow a brain with less than 12 billion bits of information and this is probably an upper bound. However, this would not imply that we could describe a brain with this amount of information since it ignores the modifications due to external inputs. For example, the visual system cannot fully develop if the brain does not receive visual inputs. So we also need to estimate how much input the brain receives during development. The amount of information available in the external world is immense so it is safe to assume that the amount received is limited by the brain and not the source. However, there is no way to estimate this in a principled way since we don't know how the brain actually works. Depending on what you assume to be the neural code (see previous post), you could end up with a very wide range of answers. Nonetheless, let's suppose that it is a rate code with a window of 10 ms. Generally, neurons fire at rates less than 100 Hz so this corresponds to the presence or absence of a spike in a 10 ms window. This corresponds to 100 bits per neuron per second. The brain has about 10^11 neurons so the maximum amount of information that could be input to the brain is 10^13 bits per second. There are over 30 million seconds in a year, so that is a lot of information and can easily dwarf the genomic contribution. However, this does lead us to a potential means to quantify the influence of genes versus environment on intelligence and behaviour debate. If the complexity of the brain is less than 12 billion bits then we are basically genetically determined. If it is greater, then we are mostly shaped by the environment. So what do you think?

CNS: Computational NeuroScience

Computational Neuroscience: modeling the mind


When people gesture while talking, it is usually for one of two reasons. If they are sure of themselves, hand movements can bring emotion and conviction to the words. If they are not so sure, they might be using the hand waving to convince you that they are right in general, and that the details are not important anyway. The latter is often the case when people talk about the brain.

It is not that what goes on beneath our scalp is a complete mystery. Modern neuroscience began over 100 years ago, when pioneering neuroanatomists began to unearth the basic architecture of the central nervous system. Since then, the field has grown significantly and today its largest conference, the Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, attracts over 30,000 attendees. Thanks to the popularity of the subject and the seemingly never-ending technical advances, scientists are now churning out masses of data at every level of analysis. Every day, they fill databases with gene sequences and protein interactions, map out networks of nerve cells, and even record the differing roles of each brain region in behaviour.

So why all the uncertainty? If all these experts are working so hard, why have we not found a cure for Alzheimer’s, understood how you can tell a cat from a dog in a split second, or explained why I feel like a person, and not just “a pack of neurons”, as suggested by Francis Crick? The answer lies in the sheer complexity of the brain. A human adult has about 100 billion neurons inside their head, all working away at their own little chores. Scientists have extensive knowledge about the different cell types, their make-up, how they are wired together, and ideas about what most of them are doing. But the leap from this to something that can do a crossword puzzle is a big one. It is not an impossible problem, exactly. Just a hard one.

Like other scientific disciplines before it, neuroscience is now reaching a stage where enough facts are known to start building general, and maybe even mathematical theories about how it all works. Computational neuroscience is the field that develops and tests these theories. That is not to say that experiments will ever become obsolete. Even relatively mature fields, such as physics, need the constant challenge of real life experiments to show who is right and who is wrong. The aim of computational neuroscience right now is to gather existing experimental data, try to fit it together in some coherent way, and go on to make suggestions and predictions for future experiments.

So how does someone tapping away at a computer in a dusty old office study the brain? They do it by trying to build theoretical models. A good example of this is a popular method called compartmental modelling, often used to examine the behaviour of single neurons (nerve cells). Since each neuron in our brain computes and transmits information using electrical signals, it is possible to think of each of them as a small, individual electrical circuit, made from the same basic elements - resistors, capacitors and the like - that control your mobile phone. In principle I could go, soldering iron in hand, and physically make a model neuron with these building blocks. Some people do. The downside is that it is a very time and resource-sapping process. It’s much easier to build a virtual circuit on your computer.

With enough constraining experimental data, these types of single-cell models can become quite detailed and include ion channels, complex molecular interactions and the varying shapes of real neurons. Once you have set up your model, you can test your hand-waving ideas explicitly and see if they fit together in a logical way. Another great advantage to this approach is that you can also do experiments on your virtual cell that are difficult, impossible or even immoral in real life, keeping animal rights activists happy in the process.

With enough data, these models can make specific statements about the real world. For example, an elegant study by Agmon-Snir and colleagues (Nature, 1998) looked at time-difference detecting neurons in the auditory brainstem. Imagine you are watching a tennis match from the stands. The grunting noise from the player on your left side will reach your left ear slightly earlier in time than your right ear. The further to the left the player is, the bigger the time difference. Your brain uses this information to tell which direction a sound came from. One puzzle was why, among the neurons involved, the ones that respond to higher-frequency sounds are smaller than those that deal with lower-frequency sounds. Agmon-Snir and colleagues created realistic computational models of these cells and showed that the higher frequency sound signals are optimally handled by neurons with shorter branches, because of noisy signal transmission.

Of course this single-cell example looks at just one of the many levels at which the brain could be studied. David Marr, an influential early theorist, defined three levels at which we can analyse a computational system such as the brain: the computational level, the algorithmic level and the implementation level. The first level identifies the computations that are to be performed. An example in the visual system would be motion detection. The second level determines the strategy used to perform this task. A computer programmer would call this the choice of algorithm. The third level looks at the physical implementation of this strategy, which in the case of the brain is the network of neurons. To a certain extent, experimental neuroscience has focused on this last ‘nuts-and-bolts’ level. Theoretical neuroscientists, however, have been working on all three levels; everything from the detailed biophysics of ion channels to more abstract full-brain models.

After defining a problem at a certain level, the theorist must design the model, taking into account several factors. Firstly, a model that is too detailed can be just as difficult to draw conclusions from as the real thing, which would render it mostly useless. To paraphrase Einstein, a model should include just enough detail to explore the question at hand and no more. Secondly, in many cases little experimental data is available to con- strain the model and ensure it reflects reality. The data must also be of high enough quality; substandard data will give you substandard results (a principle known among computer programmers as GIGO: Garbage In, Garbage Out). Thirdly, even with the extraordinary speed of modern computers, some simulations can take days or even weeks to run. For this reason, modellers may not want to include all the details, and may instead use approximations. Fortunately, computer processing power continues to increase every year. Many modern studies are based on ideas that others had decades ago but simply lacked the computational resources to implement at the time.

Neuroscience used to be a divided field, with the experimentalists complaining that the theorists were fiddling around with abstract ideas that would never work in a real brain, and the theorists criticising the experimentalists for filling the literature with reams of boring data. These divisions are rapidly fading. Many researchers are realising that steady progress will require a two-way flow of ideas. Even more scientists are actively blurring the lines by adapting methods from both approaches. This inter-disciplinary outlook will ensure that exciting times lie ahead for our understanding of the brain and, in many ways, of ourselves.


Refs:
  • The role of dendrites in auditory coincidence detection. H Agmon-Snir, C E Carr, J Rinzel. Nature (1998) 393 (6682) 268-72 PMID: 9607764
  • Computational neuroscience. T J Sejnowski, C Koch, P S Churchland. Science (1988) 241 (4871), 1299-306 PMID: 3045969

Neuroscience Blog Festival

Nice Tool

Dabbleboard Collaborative Whiteboard

Posted: 03 Oct 2008 11:20 PM CDT

It is amazing what you can do with Dabbleboard, have a look at the video. Is it useful for bloggers? What do you think?

Online whiteboard Dabbleboard makes drawing diagrams, jotting notes and sketches, and sharing that work easy online. Dabbleboard comes with a library of readily-available objects for piecing together org charts, mind maps, network diagrams, floor plans, photo annotation, interface designs, and electrical diagrams. When you share your Dabbleboard work with someone via emai, you can watch, real-time, as he or she makes changes to it. There’s also a public library of Dabbleboard drawings that you can copy and edit for your own purposes. Hit the play button above for a demo of what you can do with Dabbleboard.

Brain Dynamics at Riken

The laboratory for Human Brain Dynamics (HBD) uses magnetoencephalography (MEG) to study basic mechanisms of brain function with emphasis on visual processing and the interaction between cognition and emotions.We have also used visual cues to study the occulomotor system and the role of attention and processing of stimuli presented at the center and periphery of the visual field.. Here are some recent results: we found the earliest effect of attention in primary visual cortex, well within 100 ms. We demonstrated that the interaction between the primary and extrastriate visual cortex is different when faces are presented in the fovea or the lower part of the visual field and the upper visual field. We have shown that face specificity in extrastriate cortex begins within 100 ms. Recently we identified stimulus and task-dependent and effects for processing illusory and moving stimuli, sensitive to where the stimulus was presented in the visual field. In summary, Our results show that the visual system can perform complex operations at extraordinary high speed, using different mechanisms for stimuli presented at the center and periphery of the visual field.

Attention verybody !

Each moment that we are awake, our senses are bombarded with stimuli. Focusing our attention on the few stimuli that are important allows us to filter out the ones irrelevant to the task at hand. The first parts of the brain to respond to objects and sounds in the environment are the so-called ‘primary’ visual and auditory cortex, respectively. Paying attention to sounds in one ear enhances the initial response of the primary auditory cortex on the opposite side. But previous studies have not found the same to be true in the primary visual cortex in subjects paying attention to objects in the visual field. Now, Vahe Poghosyan and Andreas A. Ioannides at the RIKEN Brain Science Institute in Wako have found that attention does in fact modulate primary cortical responses to both auditory and visual stimuli1. The researchers directed five human subjects to pay attention to a pre-determined sound coming into one ear, or to a pre-determined image within a specific part of the visual field. They then presented a variety of auditory and visual stimuli, and asked the subjects to respond only to the pre-determined sound or image by raising their finger, ignoring all of the irrelevant stimuli. For example, a subject may be told to respond only to sound in the right ear, and to ignore sound in the left ear, as well as any presented images. More

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02 oktober 2008

"SEED": Brain Food for Mind Science

Freud Works

sigmund freud

Long term psychodynamic psychotherapy (LTPP) is an effective treatment for complex mental disorders. Long term meaning at least one year or 50 sessions. Complex mental disorders means personality disorders, chronic mental disorders (defined as lasting at least a year), multiple mental disorders (2 or more mental disorders), or complex depression and anxiety disorders.

ResearchBlogging.org F. Leichsenring, S. Rabung (2008). Effectiveness of Long-term Psychodynamic Psychotherapy: A Meta-analysis JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 300 (13), 1551-1565 DOI: 10.1001/jama.300.13.1551

01 oktober 2008

Fragile Dopamine ?

An intersting link between the most common genetic cause of mental retardation-ADHD-autisme (Fragile X syndrome) and dopamine has been found. FMRP deficiency plays a major role in dopaminergic neurotransmission deficiency. Read more in Nature....

ME ! (Many Eyes) from Watson (h)eyes

CINNR

As seen on CiNNr
If it's broken they will fix it.