蜜臀av性久久久久|国产免费久久精品99|国产99久久久久久免费|成人精品一区二区三区在线|日韩精品一区二区av在线|国产亚洲欧美在线观看四区|色噜噜综合亚洲av中文无码|99久久久国产精品免费播放器

<cite id="ygcks"><center id="ygcks"></center></cite>
  • 
    
  • <rt id="ygcks"></rt>
    <cite id="ygcks"></cite>
  • <li id="ygcks"><source id="ygcks"></source></li> <button id="ygcks"></button>
  • <button id="ygcks"></button>
    <button id="ygcks"><input id="ygcks"></input></button>
    
    
    <abbr id="ygcks"><source id="ygcks"></source></abbr>
    
    
     
    Pets can tell time: study
                     Source: Xinhua | 2018-11-04 00:23:13 | Editor: huaxia

    A staff members poses with a dog during a 'Wuffstock' Halloween event, at the Morristown Animal Inn in Morristown, New Jersey, U.S., October 26, 2018. Picture taken October 26, 2018. (Xinhua/REUTERS)

    CHICAGO, Nov. 3 (Xinhua) -- A study from Northwestern University (NU) has found some of the clearest evidence that animals can judge time. By examining the brain's medial entorhinal cortex, the researchers discovered a previously unknown set of neurons that turn on like a clock when an animal is waiting.

    NU researchers set up an experiment called the virtual "door stop" task. In the experiment, a mouse runs on a physical treadmill in a virtual reality environment. The mouse learns to run down a hallway to a door that is located about halfway down the track. After six seconds, the door opens, allowing the mouse to continue down the hallway to receive its reward.

    After running several training sessions, researchers made the door invisible in the virtual reality scene. In the new scenario, the mouse still knew where the now-invisible "door" was located based on the floor's changing textures. And it still waited six seconds at the "door" before abruptly racing down the track to collect its reward.

    "The important point here is that the mouse doesn't know when the door is open or closed because it's invisible," said James Heys, a postdoctoral fellow at NU and the study's first author. "The only way he can solve this task efficiently is by using his brain's internal sense of time."

    NU researchers took the experiment one step further by imaging the mice's brain activity. Using two-photon microscopy, which allows advanced, high-resolution imaging of the brain, they watched the mice's neurons fire.

    "As the animals run along the track and get to the invisible door, we see the cells firing that control spatial encoding," said Daniel Dombeck, an associate professor of neurobiology in NU's Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences. "Then, when the animal stops at the door, we see those cells turned off and a new set of cells turn on. This was a big surprise and a new discovery."

    "Not only are the cells active during rest," he said, "but they actually encode how much time the animal has been resting."

    The researchers have found these new time-encoding neurons, now they can study how neurodegenerative diseases might affect this set of cells.

    "Patients with Alzheimer's disease notably forget when things happened in time," Heys said. "Perhaps this is because they are losing some of the basic functions of the entorhinal cortex, which is one of the first brain regions affected by the disease."

    "So this could lead to new early-detection tests for Alzheimer's," Dombeck added. "We could start asking people to judge how much time has elapsed or ask them to navigate a virtual reality environment - essentially having a human do a 'door stop' task."

    The study has been published online in the journal Nature Neuroscience.

    Back to Top Close
    Xinhuanet

    Pets can tell time: study

    Source: Xinhua 2018-11-04 00:23:13

    A staff members poses with a dog during a 'Wuffstock' Halloween event, at the Morristown Animal Inn in Morristown, New Jersey, U.S., October 26, 2018. Picture taken October 26, 2018. (Xinhua/REUTERS)

    CHICAGO, Nov. 3 (Xinhua) -- A study from Northwestern University (NU) has found some of the clearest evidence that animals can judge time. By examining the brain's medial entorhinal cortex, the researchers discovered a previously unknown set of neurons that turn on like a clock when an animal is waiting.

    NU researchers set up an experiment called the virtual "door stop" task. In the experiment, a mouse runs on a physical treadmill in a virtual reality environment. The mouse learns to run down a hallway to a door that is located about halfway down the track. After six seconds, the door opens, allowing the mouse to continue down the hallway to receive its reward.

    After running several training sessions, researchers made the door invisible in the virtual reality scene. In the new scenario, the mouse still knew where the now-invisible "door" was located based on the floor's changing textures. And it still waited six seconds at the "door" before abruptly racing down the track to collect its reward.

    "The important point here is that the mouse doesn't know when the door is open or closed because it's invisible," said James Heys, a postdoctoral fellow at NU and the study's first author. "The only way he can solve this task efficiently is by using his brain's internal sense of time."

    NU researchers took the experiment one step further by imaging the mice's brain activity. Using two-photon microscopy, which allows advanced, high-resolution imaging of the brain, they watched the mice's neurons fire.

    "As the animals run along the track and get to the invisible door, we see the cells firing that control spatial encoding," said Daniel Dombeck, an associate professor of neurobiology in NU's Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences. "Then, when the animal stops at the door, we see those cells turned off and a new set of cells turn on. This was a big surprise and a new discovery."

    "Not only are the cells active during rest," he said, "but they actually encode how much time the animal has been resting."

    The researchers have found these new time-encoding neurons, now they can study how neurodegenerative diseases might affect this set of cells.

    "Patients with Alzheimer's disease notably forget when things happened in time," Heys said. "Perhaps this is because they are losing some of the basic functions of the entorhinal cortex, which is one of the first brain regions affected by the disease."

    "So this could lead to new early-detection tests for Alzheimer's," Dombeck added. "We could start asking people to judge how much time has elapsed or ask them to navigate a virtual reality environment - essentially having a human do a 'door stop' task."

    The study has been published online in the journal Nature Neuroscience.

    010020070750000000000000011105091375798171
    江津市| 开化县| 永登县| 泸溪县| 闽侯县| 基隆市| 游戏| 东光县| 冕宁县| 乌兰浩特市| 文安县| 武威市| 申扎县| 黔南| 叶城县| 麻栗坡县| 三台县| 洞头县| 县级市| 泌阳县| 阿图什市| 台中市| 大冶市| 沂水县| 南阳市| 新沂市| 通渭县| 普格县| 四子王旗| 乳山市| 东台市| 大厂| 金川县| 阿勒泰市| 本溪市| 姜堰市| 龙门县| 靖西县| 关岭| 新平| 博乐市|