Neuroscience in a Nutshell

Sessions at the ongoing Society for Neuroscience meeting have covered topics from brain development to emotional processing.

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HUMAN BRAIN PROJECTHow does experience change the brain’s structure and connectivity? Researchers know, for example, that suturing shut one eye of a young rodent leads to dramatic changes in the brain regions receiving visual input, Tomomi Shimogori of the RIKEN Brain Science Institute said yesterday (November 14) at the Society for Neuroscience (SfN) meeting in San Diego, California. However “we don’t know which exact experience changes which neural circuit,” Shimogori said. “Moreover we don’t know what is the molecular basis that is controlling this dynamic structural change during the critical period.”

Experience can also affect the brain in adulthood. In a separate session, on the neural basis of emotion, Leonie Koban of the University of Colorado Boulder discussed the roles of both learning and of social influence on perceptions of pain in response to a one-second heat stimulus. Koban and colleagues found that both factors played a role in pain perception, but that different brain regions lit up on an MRI scan in response to learning, as opposed to social cues. “This suggests multiple and possibly independent networks [influence] the expectancy of pain,” Koban said.

Across subfields of neuroscience, a recurring challenge has been that most experimental work is limited to rodents. But the mouse brain is dramatically different from the human one, both in size ...

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  • Jef Akst

    Jef Akst was managing editor of The Scientist, where she started as an intern in 2009 after receiving a master’s degree from Indiana University in April 2009 studying the mating behavior of seahorses.
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