How can this be applied to stroke recovery since our brain is working so damned hard that we are fatigued all the time?
http://neurosciencenews.com/energy-conservation-learning-neuroscience-2936/
Our brains not only contain learning mechanisms but also
forgetting mechanisms that erase “unnecessary” learning. A research
group at Lund University in Sweden has now been able to describe one of
these mechanisms at the cellular level.
The group’s results, published in the international journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, explain a theoretical learning phenomenon which has so far been difficult to understand.
The premise is that human or animal subjects can learn to associate a
certain tone or light signal with a puff of air to the eye. The air
puff makes the subject blink, and eventually they blink as soon as they
hear the tone or see the light signal. The strange thing, however, is
that if the tone and the light are presented together (and with the air
puff), the learning does not improve, but gets worse.
“Two stimuli therfore achieve worse results than just one. It seems
contrary to common sense, but we believe that the reason for it is that
the brain wants to save energy”, says brain researcher and professor
Germund Hesslow.
His colleague Anders Rasmussen, who performed the present study, has
previously shown that when the brain has learnt a particular association
sufficiently, certain neurons that act as a brake on the learning
mechanism, are activated.
“You could say that the part of the brain that learned the
association (a part of the brain called the cerebellum) is telling its
‘teacher’: ‘I know this now, please be quiet’. When the brain has learnt
two associations, the brake becomes much more powerful. That is why it
results in forgetting, usually only temporarily, however”, explains
Germund Hesslow.
Maintaining unnecessary association pathways requires energy for the
brain. The researchers believe that this is the reason for the brake
mechanism – even though in this case it happened to be a little too
powerful.
The Lund researchers were able to describe how the nerve cells learn
and forget through studies of animals, but believe that the mechanisms
are likely to be the same in the human brain. Therefore, these findings
are of fundamental interest for both brain researchers and
psychologists. They could also be of practical interest to educators.
“Obviously, it should be important for teachers to know the
mechanisms by which the brain erases the things it considers
unnecessary. You do not want to accidentally activate these mechanisms”,
says Germund Hesslow.
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