免费看黄色大片-久久精品毛片-欧美日韩亚洲视频-日韩电影二区-天天射夜夜-色屁屁ts人妖系列二区-欧美色图12p-美女被c出水-日韩的一区二区-美女高潮流白浆视频-日韩精品一区二区久久-全部免费毛片在线播放网站-99精品国产在热久久婷婷-午夜精品理论片-亚洲人成网在线播放

MIT study shows how brain pattern triggers habits

Source: Xinhua| 2018-02-09 03:15:56|Editor: Mu Xuequan
Video PlayerClose

WASHINGTON, Feb. 8 (Xinhua) -- American scientists identified how distinctive brain pattern helped form routine habits like brushing teeth, a package activity composed of smaller actions that brains had automated to complete.

A study, published Thursday in the journal Current Biology, showed that certain neurons in the brain were responsible for marking the beginning and end of the chunked units of behavior.

Neuroscientists from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) found neurons located in striatum, a brain region highly involved in habit formation, fired at the outset of a learned routine, went quiet while it was carried out, then fired again once the routine had ended.

This task-bracketing appears to be important for initiating a routine and then notifying the brain once it is complete, said Ann Graybiel, an Institute Professor at MIT, and the senior author of the study.

Once these patterns form, it becomes extremely difficult to break the habit, said Graybiel.

Graybiel and her team set out to determine whether this firing pattern could be conclusively linked with the chunking of habitual behavior.

The researchers trained rats to press two levers in a particular sequence, for example, 1-2-2 or 2-1-2. The rats had to figure out what the correct sequence was, and if they did, they received a chocolate milk reward.

It took several weeks for them to learn the task, and as they became more accurate, the researchers saw the same beginning-and-end firing patterns develop in the striatum.

Because each rat learned a different sequence, the researchers could rule out the possibility that the patterns correspond to the motor input required to perform a particular series of movements.

This offers strong evidence that the firing pattern corresponds specifically to the initiation and termination of a learned routine, the researchers said.

The researchers also discovered a distinct pattern in a set of inhibitory neurons, known as interneurons, in the striatum.

The interneurons would be activated during the time when the rats were in the middle of performing the learned sequence, and could possibly be preventing the principal neurons from initiating another routine until the current one was finished.

Graybiel's lab is now investigating further how the interaction between these two groups of neurons helps to encode habitual behavior in the striatum.

TOP STORIES
EDITOR’S CHOICE
MOST VIEWED
EXPLORE XINHUANET
010020070750000000000000011105091369602091