MIT Researchers Explore How Rats Think 136
Ant writes "A Nature News article explains that, after running a maze, rats mentally replay their actions backwards." From the article: "As the rats ran along the track, the nerve cells fired in a very specific sequence. This is not surprising, because certain cells in this region are known to be triggered when an animal passes through a particular spot in a space. But the researchers were taken aback by what they saw when the rats were resting. Then, the same brain cells replayed the sequence of electrical firing over and over, but in reverse and speeded up. 'It's absolutely original; no one has ever seen this before at all,' says Edvard Moser, who studies memory at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology in Trondheim."
Move over CS grads (Score:5, Funny)
If a rat knows the difference between a Stack and a Queue, you better start updating your resume.
Re:Move over CS grads (Score:2)
"to iterate is rat, to recurse is divine", or maybe it should be: "to iterate is rat, to recurse human"
Re:Move over CS grads (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Move over CS grads (Score:1)
Or do the parasites cause me to tune in on duplicates in some uncanny fashion - like slashdot midoclorians [chefelf.com]
Re:Move over CS grads (Score:2)
Re:Move over CS grads (Score:2)
Re:Move over CS grads (Score:1)
backwards storage (Score:1)
Re:Move over CS grads (Score:1)
Re:Move over CS grads (Score:2)
I found this very interesting. (Score:1, Funny)
interesting... (Score:2)
Are dreams there only to help the learning process? Is there something more to them?
Re:interesting... (Score:2)
I'd be surprised if this proves true in people. Most people can't even remember where they parked their car.
Re:interesting... (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't know how much there is to officially back this up, but I think this is why OOP caught on so well, at least with some people. If you have a system made of interacting modular components, your brain doesn't have to conceptualize sections of some messy lines of ASM or C code... it can just use the constructs you've actually built into the system, so the "processing cost" of groking the system is much cheaper.
Re:interesting... (Score:2)
I thought at the time one could make a good VR programming environment - none of this silly lines of code stuff, instead you move classes and objects as visual structures (blocks if you like) so you can see exactly what is interacting with what.
Re:interesting... (Score:1)
Re:interesting... (Score:2)
Re:interesting... (Score:1)
Re:interesting... (Score:2)
Yeah, I guess that's why I keep coming back to
Re:interesting... (Score:1)
Re:Why is this NEW!!! I do it all the time! (Score:2)
Interesting (Score:5, Insightful)
Stress & studying for exams (Score:2, Interesting)
a) There are "key days", where I panic about not being able to learn stuff in time and those are the days when I remember/understand stuff far better than on self-confident days. On "panic days", I learn 3x-5x more effiently than on self-confident days.
b) I might study a whole day long and dont understand or at least not being able to explain the formulas/problems/algorithms/whatever in my own words. And then I panic. When I have gone to sleep
Re:Stress & studying for exams (Score:1)
....
Sometimes I remember the dreams of those nights being about formulas and exams.
It pisses me off so much when I wake up dreaming about the problem I was working on the night before... as if work/school (same thing for me) has completely taken over my life.
In fact, it stresses me out more to be "stumped" than to have a deadline. I have to wonder if this is a natural learning strategy for some people - if you don't understand somethi
Dominos Pizza now hiring deliver drivers (Score:1)
Back-error propagation (Score:2)
Here's a brief summary (Score:3, Funny)
-Eric
Re:Interesting (Score:1)
This i
Tomorrow's Headline (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Tomorrow's Headline (Score:3, Funny)
Narf! (Score:3, Funny)
Dude! Where have you been lately? (Score:2)
Plotting? They have already acieved it! the species is called Rattus Politicianus, you it infests senate, parlieamentary and other government buildings world wide. There is also a lesser species called Rattus Lawyeriensis it is usually found chasing after ambulances or monitoring peoples internet connections looking for evidence of illegal music downloads.
Re:Dude! Where have you been lately? (Score:2)
I was going to go for the quick jab at congress.
But you seem to have done it with a little finesse.
ok. just johnny hold on (Score:1, Interesting)
Can they induce the maze path into the mouse?
the learning possibilities (Score:4, Interesting)
Any teaching style that will appeal to a hyperactive child, will more than likely be engaging for a 'normal' student.
Though it might be a stretch to suggest this could be extended to understanding hyperactive kids. AFAIK, they usually have abnormally low levels of dopamine and/or seratonin in their brains, while the article posits that "The rerun [for mice] could coincide with a burst of the reward chemical dopamine, which is released in the brain when the animal finds food."
Maybe they can find some hyperactive mice to run the tests on?
ADHD, schmDHD (Score:2)
Re:the learning possibilities (Score:2)
Re:Kids are OK- Teachers are Boring, Parents are L (Score:2)
"Blackboard Jungle" was a "Be afraid! The kids are revolting!" movie. It's no more re
How they think? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:How they think? (Score:2)
Wish I had mod points, that's funny as hell.
Re:How they think? (Score:2)
Never Before Has There Been A Comment Like This (Score:4, Funny)
Except for the rats, of course.
Real political science. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Real political science. (Score:1)
Why this hasn't been discovered earlier is because these experiments are ususally done on politicians - there are no animal rights group, or any other group, fighting for their fair treatment.
And since these experiments have only been done on politicians earlier no previous experiments have shown any brain activity ever comtemplating earlier decisions.
Re:Real political science. (Score:3, Funny)
Interestingly enough.... (Score:4, Funny)
I read this article twice... (Score:2, Informative)
I suspect they will find the same true for people (Score:4, Interesting)
Whoa, I'm reading back my post and thinking WTF!
You mean laywers, right? (Score:1)
(Not really)
Re:I suspect they will find the same true for peop (Score:2)
Though I guess its worth nothing that i'm also one of those people who sucks at reading the alphabet backwards. And if i'm ever quizzed on "what letter comes before..." I generally have to pick a 'landmark' string of letters ('lmnop' seems to be easiest, dont ask me why) and quickly
Re:I suspect they will find the same true for peop (Score:2)
I've also noticed that when taking a new route for the first time, such as finding a room in a campus build never visited before, the outgoing path always seems twice as long as the return path.
There was an article about how London taxi drivers had larger hippocampi regions>/a> when compared to non-taxi drivers. [pnas.org]
Re:I suspect they will find the same true for peop (Score:2)
I suspect there are different mechanisms at play here.
This is morking with a documented phenomena with rats whereby they will take the same route to/from a location over and over, moreso than most other critters.
It sounds like this goes some way to dexcribing the mechanism
Well... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Well... (Score:1)
And nobody has asked... (Score:1, Interesting)
Oh well.... (Score:1)
back propagation learning algorithm (Score:5, Informative)
It's called back propagation learning [wikipedia.org] The algortihm is based on the error propagation backwards from the output nodes to the inner nodes of neural net.
Re:back propagation learning algorithm (Score:3, Informative)
You could describe the proc
Re:back propagation learning algorithm (Score:2, Interesting)
The biological brain is not just a function.
Replay and Reward (Score:2)
Re:Replay and Reward (Score:2)
You are right in that this type of sequencial inforamtion is capable of encoding causa
Re:Replay and Reward (Score:1)
Maybe not; don't bees, returning to the hive after locating a juicy pollen spot, do a "dance" that teaches the other bees the location, but the dance is in reverse? I will try to find a reference.
Re:Replay and Reward (Score:2)
Then again, there's spike timing dependent plasticity (STDP) to consider. I'm not sure how this is effected by the sequence being played in reverse. The hippocampus does seem to be multimodal (learni
Since they are Norwegian (Score:1)
Link to paper (requires Nature access) (Score:2, Informative)
I could have saved them alot of trouble.... (Score:1, Redundant)
I don't even care that this is the fourth time this morning, this never gets old. I wouldn't mind a glass of milk
common trait (Score:2, Interesting)
Of course, it doesn't take a MIT researcher to figure that out, just funding and identification
Memory Reading (Score:1)
Re:Memory Reading (Score:2)
Re:Memory Reading (Score:2)
Soon to be followed by... (Score:1)
With the dating and the lipstick and the slaps in the face, hoy-vn-fra-gn!
There already is a case study going on. (Score:1)
The studies seem to be quite comprehensive and even may shed some light on a rat variant that is pervasive in Washington state. But it is known that those rats are a bit more deceptive and may be able to escape the spotlight in these studies.
How Rats think... (Score:1, Redundant)
2) Eat
3) Reproduce
4) Find burrow and Sleep
5) Return to procedure 1)
Re:How Rats think... (Score:1)
I wonder if the rat is reciting poetry (Score:1)
Rats don't need to think (Score:2)
Just a little spot on Monday morning humour...
Back Propagation (Score:1)
Re:Back Propagation (Score:1)
It seems more to me that it's going through its existing knowledge, trying to remember something. Backpropagation deals more with refining memories. Plus, this is unsupervised, not supervised learning, so I wouldn't think there would be any backpropagation.
I do wonder though, how this corresponds to associative memory. Maybe something is going on that's similar to adaptive resonance theory.
Cool (Score:1)
Benny Hill was unavailable for comment.
New Science? (Score:4, Informative)
In a Nutshell ... it looks less impressive (Score:2)
b) researchers saw the same nerve cells activate in reverse order while the rats rested;
c) researchers speculate either wildly or obviously that the rats are replaying the event and that maybe the rats are mentally replaying the run, and that maybe it would be the same in a maze, and maybe this coincides with dopamine release (not observed or measured), and that if maybe that were so, it would maybe
So that explains Microsoft strategy... (Score:1)
Yeah and... (Score:2)
The people in the White House are upset over the invasion of privacy!
Makes sense (Score:1)
So rats can think... (Score:1)
But why test rats? It's way more important to know if politicians and higher management types can think. Is this feat within their reach? Or are they, as we unscientifically suspect, completely braindead?
Inquiring minds want to know!
Heh (Score:1)
Practical uses (Score:2)
Well, duh... (Score:1)
backwards memory? (Score:2)
`I don't understand you,' said Alice. `It's dreadfully confusing!'
`That's the effect of living backwards,' the Queen said kindly: `it always makes one a little giddy at first --'
`Living backwards!' Alice repeated in great astonishment. `I never heard of such a thing!'
`-- but there's one great advantage in it, that one's memory works both ways.'
`I'm sure mine only works one way,' Alice remarked. `I can't remember things before they happen.'
`It's a poor sort of memory that only wo
Pretty straight forward?? (Score:1)
A rat in the real world (e.g. my shed) routinely goes out from where it lives to scavenge food. This creature has a home base and returns there. From an evolutionary point of view I imagine there would be strong selection pressures to be able to return to it's home and not get lost and end up with the neighbours cat. As such, when the rat gets to the food it's brain would want to be primed for the return trip, which is most likely in recent memory and not committed to long term mem
Re:brain == computer (Score:2)
Re:brain == computer (Score:2)
Re:brain == computer (Score:4, Funny)
Re:brain == computer (Score:1)
Re:brain == computer (Score:4, Informative)
Re:brain == computer (Score:1)
Best of all might be Gerald Edelman's "Bright Air, Brilliant Fire" (or "Wider Than The Sky"). From the back of the book, there's a quote to the effect that the functioning of the human brain more closely resembles a rainforest ecosystem than a modern digital computer. Grok it, baby!
Re:Rats suffer from Slashdotism (Score:1)
Yeah, anyone else read this and think "Not another interview with Darl McBride"?
Re:Meanwhile, at MIT, they're thinking... (Score:1)
Oh noooooooo... meanwhile they're thinking.... (Score:1)
Re:How rats think? (Score:1)