A team of researchers in France has found a way to alter how a mouse
"feels" about something it has remembered. In their paper published in
the journal Nature Neuroscience, the team describes how they
recorded brain activity while mice visited new areas of their cage, then
stimulated their brains while they slept in a way that made them favor
the place they had visited and remembered.
Altering memories has always been the stuff of science fiction, but
now it appears that there might be a way to cause someone to change how
they feel about something by stimulating their brain while they sleep—if
the findings by the team in France apply to human brains.
To find out if they could change how a mouse "felt" about something
it remembered, the researchers hooked up several of the rodents to brain
scanners and then recorded brain activity as they scouted out their new
cages. In particular, the researchers were keen on noting when certain
cells, known as "place" cells (neurons that prior research has shown are
involved in storing memories) fired in response to something that the
mouse was seeing—in this case, a certain part of its cage. Other
research has shown that certain dreams entail reviewing recent
experiences, causing the same place cells to become active again. Thus, later, after the mice were sleeping, the researchers monitored brain activity
again, watching for when that same place cell that had become active
earlier, became active again. When it did, the researchers sent a signal
to a part of the mouse's brain associated with a reward. Upon
awakening, the mice all went straight to the part of the cage that had
been caused to be associated with a reward.
The researchers note that their experiments did not result in new
memories being created, instead, they had changed the way that the mice
responded to something they were remembering anyway. The team also noted
that it was not clear if the same sort of experiment would work with
people, but if so, it might be possible to use it to help people with
PTSD. The researchers also do not know if their technique could be used
to cause changes to associations with more complicated tasks, such as
all the parts of an event, or when learning something new.
SOURCE:
Medicalxpress



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