http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/7151920.stm
 
Single brain cell's power shown 

There could be enough computing ability in just one brain cell to 
allow humans and animals to feel, a study suggests. 

The brain has 100 billion neurons but scientists had thought they 
needed to join forces in larger networks to produce thoughts and 
sensations. 

The Dutch and German study, published in Nature, found that 
stimulating just one rat neuron could deliver the sensation of touch. 

One UK expert said this was the first time this had been measured in 
mammals. 

These studies drive down the level at which relevant computation is 
happening in the brain Dr Douglas Armstrong Edinburgh Centre for 
Bioinformatics  

The complexity of the human brain and how it stores countless 
thoughts, sensations and memories are still not fully understood. 

Researchers believe connections between individual neurons, forming 
networks of at least a thousand, are the key to some of its 
processing power. 

However, in some creatures with simpler nervous systems, such as 
flies, a single neuron can play a more significant role. The latest 
research suggests this may also be true in "higher" animals. 

The team, from the Humboldt University in Germany and the Erasmus 
Medical Center in the Netherlands, stimulated single neurons in rats 
and found this was enough to trigger a behavioural response when 
their whiskers were touched. 

A second research project from the US suggests the computational 
ability of the brain cell could be even more complex, with different 
synapses - the many junctions between neurons and other nerve cells - 
able to act independently from those found elsewhere on the same 
cell. 

This could mean that, within a single neuron, different synapses 
could be storing or processing completely different bits of 
information. 

Computing power 

Dr Douglas Armstrong, the deputy director of the Edinburgh Centre for 
Bioinformatics, said the research did not mean all neurons had an 
individual role to play but that, in some instances, they might be 
capable of working alone with measurable results. 

He said: "The generally accepted model was that networks or arrays 
make decisions and that the influence of a single neuron is smaller - 
but this work and other recent studies support a more important role 
for the individual neuron. 

"These studies drive down the level at which relevant computation is 
happening in the brain." 

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/health/7151920.stm

Published: 2007/12/22 00:02:38 GMT

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