By BENEDICT CAREY
Scientists have for the first time recorded individual brain cells in the act of summoning a spontaneous memory, revealing not only where a remembered experience is registered but also, in part, how the brain is able to recreate it.
The recordings, taken from the brains of epilepsy patients being prepared for surgery, demonstrate that these spontaneous memories reside in some of the same neurons that fired most furiously when the recalled event was experienced. Researchers had long theorized as much, but until now had only indirect evidence.
Experts said the study was all but conclusive: For the brain, remembering is a lot like doing (at least in the short term, as the research says nothing about more distant memories).
The experiment, which was reported September 5 in the journal Science, is likely to open a new avenue in the investigation of Alzheimer’s disease and other forms of dementia, some experts said, as well as help explain how some memories seemingly come out of nowhere. The researchers were even able to identify specific memories in subjects a second or two before the people themselves reported having them.
“I cannot think of any recent study that’s comparable,” said Michael J. Kahana, a professor of psychology at the University of Pennsylvania, who was not involved in the research. “It’s a really central piece of the memory puzzle and an important step in helping us fill in the detail of what exactly is happening when the brain performs this mental time travel.”
The new study moved beyond most previous memory research in that it focused not on recognition or recollection of specific symbols but on free recall - whatever came into people’s heads when, in this case, they were asked to remember short film clips they had just seen.
This ability to richly reconstitute past experience often deteriorates quickly in people with Alzheimer’s and other forms of dementia, and it is fundamental to so-called episodic memory, the catalog of vignettes that together form our remembered past.
In the study, a team of American and Israeli researchers threaded tiny electrodes into the brains of 13 people with severe epilepsy. The implants are standard procedure in such cases, allowing doctors to pinpoint the location of the mini-storms of brain activity that cause epileptic seizures. The patients watched a series of 5- to 10-second film clips, some from popular television shows and others depicting animals or landmarks like the Eiffel Tower.
The researchers recorded the firing activity of about 100 neurons per person; the recorded neurons were concentrated in and around the hippocampus, a sliver of tissue deep in the brain known to be critical to forming memories. In each person, the researchers identified single cells that became highly active during some videos and quiet during others. More than half the recorded cells hummed with activity in response to at least one film clip; many of them also responded weakly to others.
After briefly distracting the patients, the researchers then asked them to think about the clips for a minute and to report “what comes to mind.” The patients remembered almost all of the clips.
And when they recalled a specific one - say, a clip of Homer Simpson - the same cells that had been active during the Homer clip reignited.
“It’s astounding to see this in a single trial; the phenomenon is strong, and we were listening in the right place,” said the senior author, Dr. Itzhak Fried, a professor of neurosurgery at the University of California, Los Angeles, and the University of Tel Aviv.
Dr. Fried said that the single neurons recorded firing most furiously during the film clips were not acting on their own; they were, like all such cells, part of a circuit responding to the videos, including thousands, perhaps millions, of other cells.
Single-cell recordings cannot capture the array of brain circuitry involved in memory, which may be distributed beyond the hippocampus area, experts said. And as time passes, memories are consolidated, submerged, perhaps retooled and often reshaped when retrieved later.
Though it did not address this longer-term process, the new study suggests that at least some of the neurons that fire when a distant memory comes to mind are those that were most active back when it happened .
“The exciting thing about this,” said Dr. Kahana, the University of Pennsylvania professor, “is that it gives us direct biological evidence of what before was almost entirely theoretical.”
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