MIT Shows How to Shut Down Brain With Light 223
An anonymous reader writes "The MIT home-page story today is about a way to use light to shut down brain activity. "Scientists at the MIT Media Lab have invented a way to reversibly silence brain cells using pulses of yellow light, offering the prospect of controlling the haywire neuron activity that occurs in diseases such as epilepsy and Parkinson's disease."
There are easier ways (Score:5, Funny)
Re:There are easier ways (Score:5, Funny)
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See also: melanopsin, receptor in human eye, sleep (Score:3, Interesting)
The cataract surgeons are debating whether it's safer to put in plastic replacement lenses that block blue (to maybe reduce the risk of eye damage from blue light), or if that's a bad idea. Turns out reducing blue during the daytime makes people sleepier.
There's a lot to this; I wonder if the MIT folks know about the other work in the area of using blue light to stay a
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Who wants to bet... (Score:5, Funny)
Going with... (Score:2)
L.O.O.K.E.R. (Score:3, Informative)
Finally! (Score:5, Funny)
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You mean that big, blue room?
I dunno about you, but I have problems going in there in the first place. That room is big. And it's got that huge, moving light that radiates heat. Probably, what, 1000 watts? Boggles the mind.
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Slight problem with their idea... (Score:5, Insightful)
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So, if we genetically engineer some people with Parkinson's or epilepsy to have these halorhodopsin neurons, we can give them a normal life as long as we find a way to shine light directly into their brains?
I think the article infers that we genetically engineer animals with Parkinson's and Epilepsy having the gene (that is, set up a disease model), then implant LED's into their heads, play with the lights and see what happens, then get a PhD and maybe even a Nobel Prize.
It's unlikely they would use this method in actual human therapy.
Re:Slight problem with their idea... (Score:5, Insightful)
I assume that the final human treatment, if any is arrived at, will be very different from what they are doing at present. Time will tell. In any case, a very interesting area of research, even if it is hyped a little regarding possible applications.
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It's a wetware debugger. (Score:4, Interesting)
The news (to me) in the story is a non-invasive tool that can "flip" individual neurons into a binary on/off state in a controlled manner. I don't know what current "tools" are capable of, nor their level of invasiveness, but it seems to me a wetware debbuging tool such as this could lead to an explosion of knowlage that would make it worthy of a Nobel prize in the not too distant future.
Having said that, AFAIK indivdual neurons are not binary, their activity level is mesured as a "frequency". It would be interesting to know if the neuron's firing frequency can be controlled with more resolution than the simple on/off implied in TFA.
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TFA (Score:2)
You read the articles?!! What kind of sick fuck are you, anyway?
On an actual point, though, Mr. Boyden just states that this SORT of thing could be used in The Future. Look: "In the future, controlling the activity patterns of neurons may enable very specific treatments for neurological and psychiatric diseases, with few or no side effects,"
See? No mention of actually using what they're making. My girlfriend's a geologi
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Severe forms of these diseases have been treated by severing the hemispheres of the brain from each other or even removing large chunks of the brain. If the disease is so bad that those therapies aren't considered worse, there's practically a universe of invasive surgery that'd be worth considering.
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It's still early, but I hear they are also working on an automated delivery system [walterkoenig.com]
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Articles summaries like this need to be pulled and rewritten or discarded. I find it really annoying to be dealt a bait and switch by Slashdot.
does it come in an ale? (Score:5, Funny)
Well, I guess that's cheaper than alcohol.
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Well, I guess that's cheaper than alcohol.
Simon (BOFH [theregister.co.uk]) already has a method for shutting down someone's brain activity
It's called "Boss-Mode" Simply start talking in Level-10 Geek-speak, and watch the Boss's brain shut down
Politics (Score:5, Funny)
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yellow lights [wikipedia.org]
I never wanted to vote for the lesser of two evils anyway....
Vote Cthulhu!
Makes sense (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Makes sense (Score:4, Insightful)
Considering certain patterns of falling boulders, as found on some mountains, for example, have the ability to bring death and people the suffer from Epilepsy (sic!). it makes sanse that certain patterns of falling boulders would also be able to reverse that effect.
NOT!
Common sense is not a substitute for knowledge. The two effects are not even related.
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Basically you're saying:
If B then A (If Light causes epileptic fits, then video games will cause epileptic fits)
If D then C (If Light can shut down cells that cause epileptic fits, then light can cure epilepsy )
Therefore If B then C (If light can cause epilepsy, light can cure epilepsy).
Clearly doesn't follow. It's like saying, "If arsenic can cause death, then arsenic should be able to cure death."
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My statement was a bit ambiguous, I apologize.
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Considering certain patterns of falling boulders, as found on some mountains, for example, have the ability to bring death and people the suffer from Epilepsy (sic!). it makes sanse that certain patterns of falling boulders would also be able to reverse that effect.
Obviously. It's already been proven in cartoons time and time again that if something falling on your head causes amnesia or a personality change that additional impact to your head will cure it. In the case of personality change you may need to apply such force several times as you may simply trigger alternate personalities instead, but you can repeat until satisfied.
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This is a well understood phenomenon. [youtube.com]
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It's absolutely true that using pulsing lights in particular ways can stimulate epileptic seizures. Doctors often do this during an EEG so that they can map the brain activity of the patient during the seizure. If lights can be used to stimulate neuron activity, the idea that light might be used to inhibit neuron activity doesn't seem like that much of a stretch, at least
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No, thats what happens when pulses of light generate signals in the brain via the optic nerve which interfere with existing signals in the brain. Incidently, back when people used to build strobe lights for discos, etc there used to be warnings about pulsing ligh
I know this technique (Score:1, Funny)
Sounds like The Prisoner is coming to life! (Score:2)
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Re:Or Wolfe (Score:5, Informative)
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Good point.
But there's a lot of "prior art" that shows you can achieve the same effect through the retina with a bluish light... specifically, that from a television.
It's about brain implants for research purposes (Score:4, Insightful)
Did anyone read TFA? It has nothing to do with light entering the eye and hitting the retina. Forget the strobe lights!
This study is great, because it means we can study animals better. It means researchers will get much more useful information from animal studies (instead of operating on 1000's of rabbits or something, they can do heaps of studies on just one rabbit), which will lead to new and better targets for drug research, better drugs, and perhaps a cure - way down the track.
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Unless you're that one rabbit!
Re:It's about brain implants for research purposes (Score:4, Funny)
You ain't from round here, are you boy?
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About the interference from previous experiments within the same animal: it depends on what you want to investigate. Of course there is neural adaptation, but in most regions it is quite slow. So after one experiment you might let the animal run around under normal conditions and it'll be as ready as ever, if only for another experiment.
Plus, when you're able to su
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Hooray! (Score:5, Funny)
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is it a tv? (Score:1, Funny)
Hmmm, sounds strangely familiar (Score:1)
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0082677/ [imdb.com]
Hmmmm,,,
Holy shit! They're two for two-- CGI media models, and now this. Maybe I better go back and watch that movie again....
~
(-by the by, I'd still like to find the soundtrack to this movie, if anyone has run across a copy-)
I, for one... (Score:3, Funny)
Damn yellowish incandescents. (Score:3, Funny)
Yet another reason CFLs are better!
Another ,,, (Score:5, Funny)
Requires halorhodopsin gene (Score:5, Interesting)
According to the article, the yellow light "silences" neurons that have been engineered to include the halorhodopsin gene found in certain bacteria. The light doesn't have the same effect on the neurons that you'd typically find in your skull.
I'm not sure how this would be used clinically to treat epilepsy. Perhaps by introducing the genes into cells in the affected area using a retrovirus?
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If you could do that then you could do lots of other useful things. How about engineering neurons to emit photons in the presence of an electric field and using the resulting stream of photons to model thought processes?
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I would think a better cure would be to fix the nerological problems or stop them from degrading
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Ya, and in exchange for your epilepsy relief (dubious) you get brain cancer. For those ready to commit suicide from the effects of debilitating epilepsy this might be a more painful and degrading way to go.
Besides, if you could use a retrovirus to introduce a snipped of DNA and then use that DNA to treat the symptom, why not use a retrovirus to treat the cause directly. That way you only have side effects from one phase
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However the blood-brain barrier is a limitation to brain gene therapy. So in 2003 a UCLA research team inserted genes into the brain using liposomes coated in polyethylene glycol [newscientist.com].
Yellow light? (Score:1)
As in sunlight?
I think they should take a look outside for once.
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Bah, too slow (Score:2)
Playing 'Russian Roulette' with a semi-automatic pistol is one idea.
Tin foil glasses (Score:2, Funny)
Hal Jordan unavailable for comment... (Score:1, Funny)
OA (Reuters) - The Guardians of the Universe held a press conference today after scientists in the MIT Media Lab announced that neural activity could be suppressed through the usage of yellow light.
Spokesperson Tom Kalmaku stated, "It's charming to see that the scientists in Sector 2814 have finally caught on to something the rest of the Galaxy has known for the better part of the past three billion years. The Corps have had to deal with the effects of yell
Like MIB (Score:2)
I've seen this in real life (Score:1)
*ba-dum-tish*
Wait, there's more, take my mother-in-law, please.
Obligatory (Score:1)
Misuse (Score:1)
belonging (Score:2, Funny)
All your neuron are belong to us!
Three memes in one, whee (Score:2)
Great! (Score:4, Insightful)
If yellow light shuts down brain cells... (Score:5, Funny)
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The traffic lights are not my gods!
And blue movies.... (Score:2)
We already knew this (Score:3, Funny)
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Nah, TV just lowers it and/or slows it down.
Powerpoint, on the other hand has been doing it for years, on *both* sides of the projector.
Can't really use the acronym for Powerpoint Meeting Syndrome...it's take for some reason.
No news to me (Score:2)
Old news! (Score:2)
Daggers of the Mind? (Score:2)
Next: yellow lights in the Whitehouse & Congre (Score:2)
Cool. We can turn off their brains. Turn them into mindless robots that pass the laws we want. They don't even have to be reasonable, or logical, or compassionate, just reactive religious zealots or irresponsible twits. Oh, wait. Somebody's already done it. damn.
With Light + *Genetic Engineering* (Score:4, Informative)
So not only would doctors have to get light inside the brain, they'd first have to genetically engineer the neurons to include and express the halorhodopsin gene. The right neurons: the ones that will later have Parkinson's Disease or whatever is being treated.
How are they going to guess which neurons? Which healthy person is going to let them genetically engineer their neurons? Those neurons are going to behave the same, though they're now expressing proteins that make them work like retinal cells?
Installing these shutdown hooks is a neat trick. But not for neurological medicine. Maybe for some biomechanics or biocomputation. Throwing genes into neurons for probing with light so violates our most absolutely personal spaces - inside our craniums and our genomes - that the cure is worse than the disease.
Easy. (Score:2)
This will have the added benefit of preventing athlete's foot.
I see it already (Score:2)
So now... (Score:2)
I wonder exactly how long this has been happening to president George W Bush, and is there any way to get his brain back?
The best thing about this discovery... (Score:2)
Yellow Light? (Score:2)
Terminal man (Score:2)
An automatic anti-seizure device was featured in the novel "Terminal Man". Hope this one would work better.
Works on drivers (Score:3, Funny)
Makes them forget that a yellow light means "go slow", not "go really really really fast".
Looker (Score:2)
Rich.
That would explain... (Score:2)
Though I'm sure an hour of the "Half our News Hour" will do the trick... they just want to make sure they have the latest brain-numbing technology.
Somebody get that bulb out of (Score:2)
Sponge Bob, say it isn't so! (Score:2)
This explains Sponge Bob (and the effects of TV in general).
this explains something (Score:2)
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B.
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