Brain Processes Information similar to Ocean Waves, Scientists Say

A doctor analyzes the magnetic resonance image (MRI) brain scan of the head and skull of a person. (Getty Images)
A doctor analyzes the magnetic resonance image (MRI) brain scan of the head and skull of a person. (Getty Images)
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Brain Processes Information similar to Ocean Waves, Scientists Say

A doctor analyzes the magnetic resonance image (MRI) brain scan of the head and skull of a person. (Getty Images)
A doctor analyzes the magnetic resonance image (MRI) brain scan of the head and skull of a person. (Getty Images)

For years, the brain has been thought of as a biological computer that processes information through traditional circuits, whereby data zips straight from one cell to another.

While that model is still accurate, a new study led by Salk Institute shows that there's also a second, very different way that the brain parses information; it’s similar to ocean waves, according to scientists. The findings were published in Science Advances on April 22.

According to the traditional model of the brain, the sensory information, like the sight of a light or the sound of a bell -- have revolved around information being detected by specialized brain cells and then shuttled from one neuron to the next. This model, however, couldn't explain how a single sensory cell can react so differently to the same thing under different conditions. A cell, for instance, might become activated in response to a quick flash of light when a man is particularly alert, but will remain inactive in response to the same light if the man’s attention is focused on something else.

The team likens the new understanding to wave-particle duality in physics and chemistry. In some situations, light behaves as if it is a particle (also known as a photon). In other situations, it behaves as if it is a wave.

“The process is comparable to waves of activity across many neighboring cells, with alternating peaks and troughs of activation -- like ocean waves. When these waves are being simultaneously generated in different places in the brain, they inevitably crash into one another. If two peaks of activity meet, they generate an even higher activity, while if a trough of low activity meets a peak, it might cancel it out. This process is called wave interference,” explained Thomas Albright, director of Salk's Vision Center Laboratory.

To test their mathematical model of how neural waves occur in the brain, the team designed an accompanying visual experiment. Two people were asked to detect a thin faint line located on a screen and flanked by other light patterns. How well the people performed this task, the researchers found, depended on where the probe was. The ability to detect the probe was elevated at some locations and depressed at other locations, forming a spatial wave predicted by the model.



Peru Gas Workers Find Thousand-year-old Mummy

Peruvian gas workers discovered the mummy of a boy believed to be over 1,000 years old while installing pipes in Lima. Ernesto BENAVIDES / AFP
Peruvian gas workers discovered the mummy of a boy believed to be over 1,000 years old while installing pipes in Lima. Ernesto BENAVIDES / AFP
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Peru Gas Workers Find Thousand-year-old Mummy

Peruvian gas workers discovered the mummy of a boy believed to be over 1,000 years old while installing pipes in Lima. Ernesto BENAVIDES / AFP
Peruvian gas workers discovered the mummy of a boy believed to be over 1,000 years old while installing pipes in Lima. Ernesto BENAVIDES / AFP

Peruvian gas workers this week found a thousand-year-old mummy while installing pipes in Lima, their company said, confirming the latest discovery of a pre-Hispanic tomb in the capital.

The workers found the trunk of a huarango tree (a species native to coastal Peru), "which served as a tomb marker in the past," at a depth of 50 centimeters (20 inches), archaeologist Jesus Bahamonde, scientific coordinator of Calidda gas company, told reporters.

The mummy of a boy aged between 10 and 15, was found at a depth of 1.2 meters, he added, said AFP.

"The burial and the objects correspond to a style that developed between 1000 and 1200," he said.

The remains discovered on Monday were found "in a sitting position, with the arms and legs bent," according to Bahamonde.

They were found in a shroud which also contained calabash gourds.

Ceramic objects, including plates, bottles and jugs decorated with geometric figures and figures of fishermen, were found next to the mummy.

The tomb and artifacts belong to the pre-Inca Chancay culture, which lived in the Lima area between the 11th and 15th centuries.

They were discovered while gas workers were removing earth from an avenue in the Puente Piedra district of northern Lima.

In Peru, utility companies must hire archaeologists when drilling the earth, because of the possibility of hitting upon heritage sites.

Calidda has made more than 2,200 archaeological finds since 2004.

Lima is home to over 500 archaeological sites, including dozens of "huacas" as ancient cemeteries are known in the Indigenous Quechua language.