Download Knowledge Directly to Your
Brain For the first time, researchers have been
able to hack into the process of learning in the brain, using induced brain
patterns to create a learned behavior. It’s not quite as advanced as an instant
kung-fu download, and it’s not as sleek as cognitive inception, but it’s still
an important finding that could lead to new teaching and rehabilitation
techniques. Future therapies could decode the brain activity
patterns of an athlete or a musician, and use them as a benchmark for teaching
another person a new activity, according to the researchers.
Scientists from Boston University and ATR Computational Neuroscience
Laboratories in Kyoto used functional magnetic resonance imaging, or fMRI, to
study the learning process. They were examining the adult brain’s aptitude for
visual perceptual learning, or VPL, in which repetitive training improves a
person’s performance on a particular task. Whether adults can do this as well as
young people has been an ongoing debate in neuroscience. Led by
BU neuroscientist Takeo Watanabe, researchers used a method called decoded fMRI
neurofeedback to stimulate the visual cortex. First they showed participants
circles at different orientations. Then they used fMRI to watch the
participants’ brain activity. The researchers were then able to train the
participants to recreate this visual cortex activity. The
volunteers were again placed in MRI machines and asked to visualize shapes of
certain colors. The participants were asked to "somehow regulate activity in the
posterior part of the brain" to make a solid green disc as large as they could.
They were told they would get a paid bonus proportional to the size of this
disc, but they weren’t told anything about what the disc meant. The researchers
watched the participants’ brain activity and monitored the activation patterns
in their visual cortices. "Participants can be trained to
control the overall mean activation of an entire brain region, " the study
authors write, "or the activation in one region relative to that in
another region. " This worked even when test subjects were not
aware of what they were learning, the researchers said. "The
most surprising thing in this study is that mere inductions of neural activation
patterns corresponding to a specific visual feature led to visual performance
improvement on the visual feature, without presenting the feature or subjects’
awareness of what was to be learned, " Watanabe said in a statement.
Watanabe and colleagues said this method can be a powerful
tool. "It can ’incept’ a person to acquire new learning,
skills, or memory, or possibly to restore skills or knowledge that has been
damaged through accident, disease, or aging, without a person’s awareness of
what is learned or memorized, " they Write. Who are most likely to benefit from the study
A. Teenagers.
B. Musicians.
C. Senior people.
D. Athletes.