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Biotech Science

In Motor Learning, New Brain Connections Form Rapidly 55

Science Daily has a report on research demonstrating directly that new connections begin to form between brain cells almost immediately as animals learn a new task. A team lead by researchers at UC Santa Cruz performed "...detailed observations of the rewiring processes that take place in the brain during motor learning. The researchers studied mice as they were trained to reach through a slot to get a seed. They observed rapid growth of... synapses between nerve cells in the motor cortex... The study used mice that had been genetically altered to make a fluorescent protein within certain neurons in the brain. The researchers were then able to use a special microscopy technique (two-photon microscopy) to obtain clear images of those neurons near the surface of the brain. The noninvasive imaging technique enabled them to view changes in individual brain cells of the mice before, during, and after the mice were trained in the seed-reaching task."
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In Motor Learning, New Brain Connections Form Rapidly

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  • So, what connections are formed when one learns to drive a motor vehicle?
    • by Ethanol-fueled ( 1125189 ) on Monday November 30, 2009 @05:05AM (#30268348) Homepage Journal
      Not many if its an automatic, that's why stick-shift drivers are more intelligent.
      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        by Fotograf ( 1515543 )
        but live shorter because makeuping your self while phoning while driving is more difficult on stick cars
        • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

          Oh, come on. Women don't know how to drive stick, much less drive at all. They'd never get licensed if it weren't for their tits.

          Nothing is more frightening than a soccer-mom behind the wheel of an Escalade or Expedition with a cell phone in one hand, Starbucks grande in the other, steering with her knees while her frightened kids cling to their back seats.
          • Why would the kids cling to their back seats? It's an Escalade, preservation of momentum and so on dictates a crash won't bother it much. Pesky kids.

            • by Ethanol-fueled ( 1125189 ) on Monday November 30, 2009 @05:39AM (#30268460) Homepage Journal
              They flip on a dime. True story: saw an accident between a Honda Del Sol [swaqvalley.com] and a Ford Expedition* at an intersection. The Del Sol was dented but able to drive away from the scene while the Expedition was flipped, turned upside down with the passenger-side roof smashed-in. The expedition apparently "jumped" the Del Sol on one side like a ramp and flipped right over.

              * The laws of physics work on more than 2 dimensions. From this: [injuryboard.com]

              People believe that the bigger their vehicle, the safer they are. That perception has propelled the SUV industry into one of the fastest growing car markets in the United States. Unfortunately, that perception is not correct. SUV's, have a disturbing tendency to roll over which results in more serious accidents. Just about every make and model of SUV's have this problem...

              What causes SUVS to flip and rollover? SUVs have a higher center of gravity because they are taller, have higher ground clearance and a narrower distance between their wheels. This higher center of gravity makes it easier for SUVs to tip over. In fact, the heavier the vehicle, which SUVs tend to be, the more likely the vehicle will tip over.

              • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

                by darthflo ( 1095225 ) *

                ... and that, kids, is why I proudly drive my M1 Abrams. With a track width of more than 3.5 metres, it won't flip over sideways, and it has that stalk extending forward to stop it from flipping over it's front when braking sharply.

                On a more serious note, though, this is quite probably the most awesome news I've heard today. Well, anything that'll increase mortality in SUV drivers is a good thing. Let's hope this sells a few extra Priuses or even Del Sols.

                • On a more serious note ... anything that'll increase mortality in SUV drivers is a good thing. Let's hope this sells a few extra Priuses or even Del Sols.

                  You hope that people die in order to increase the sales of battery-powered cars? Wow.

                  Mod parent "Asshole, plus I hope you die in a car wreck."

                • >>Well, anything that'll increase mortality in SUV drivers is a good thing. Let's hope this sells a few extra Priuses or even Del Sols.

                  You know that the green movement caused us to have SUVs, right? We used to have these things called "station wagons", but CAFE standards essentially forced car companies to reinvent them (since there was a strong consumer need) as light trucks.

                  Kind of like how the Clean Air Act is responsible for global warming. It's one of those things that eco-hippies don't like to t

                  • Sorry for omitting the sarcasm tags. I don't actually like people dying, not even in SUVs. Especially seeing as SUV drivers don't quite strike me as the kind of people carrying an organ donor card.

                    On CAFE:
                    Actually, I didn't; thanks for that. Reading up on it [wikipedia.org], I can't help but dislike it. Seems like another unnecessary piece of legislation. In my opinion, just jacking gas up to reasonable rates (say, $6 to $6 per gallon, somewhere in the vicinity of the rest of the world) and using the tax brought in with th

                    • by ShakaUVM ( 157947 ) on Monday November 30, 2009 @01:08PM (#30272122) Homepage Journal

                      Seems like another unnecessary piece of legislation. In my opinion, just jacking gas up to reasonable rates (say, $6 to $6 per gallon, somewhere in the vicinity of the rest of the world) and using the tax brought in with that measure for roads and public transit would help a great deal more, while allowing those 30% of station wagon drivers who actually require the space to choose for themselves if they want or don't want to pay up.

                      Fair enough. Public transit only really works in dense urban areas though, and since America has a lot more land available (LA County would cover all of London and out to the coast to the east and south) its public transportation systems tend to likewise suck. I actually like public transportation, but even when I lived in the Bay Area, which has one of the most developed public transit systems, it would take 3.5 hours on the BART to get somewhere that was about 45 minutes by car, with traffic. LA public transportation is even worse, and they've been investing heavily in public transportatio instead of highways for the last 30 years. All they got out of it was a road system that was hopelessly snarled compared with the contiguous Orange County, which took the opposite approach. The transition from LA to OC on the interstate is like waking up from a nightmare.

                      In places like downtown Manhattan, though, public transit works quite fine, because it is dense enough to make sense.

                      If we're concerned with CO2 emissions, we can halve our national CO2 output in America simply by switching to nuclear power. The outlay on this (I've run the numbers myself) would range between $400B and $4T at current prices (though when building plants en masse and providing liability protection would likely put the cost around $300B), and would allow us to meet all conceivable CO2 goals without making the utterly impractical approach of trying to get people to stop driving. People won't change their habits.

                      I'm giving a guest lecture on global warming tomorrow at a local college, and the students know this, so I'm going to poll them how many drove to the school vs. biked or walked, as well as how many think global warming is a serious problem. If my experience is right, about 75% will think it's a problem, and yet all of them will have driven anyway.

                      >>Being European, I'm also not that familiar with the Clean Air Act, but seeing how the DMCA, CAN-SPAM or the Various Wars on Stuff are working out, I can imagine expense and results.

                      Similar measures were taken in England, to get rid of the killer smog that was killing thousands of people every year. Not saying that was bad (nobody wants to live next to a dirty smokestack), but all the particulate matter we were throwing into the year wasn't just stopping the global warming from the CO2, but was actually causing a decrease in global temperatures. When filters were put on, you can measure the corresponding decrease in atmospheric particulate count, and global temperatures started rising quite swiftly after that. I can provide references if you'd like, I have them all on hand for the lecture I'm prepping right now.

                    • What annoys me are pretentious pricks driving pretentious SUVs with dismal mileage, handling or anything exclusively through well-plowed and much-used city roads and highways.

                      What do you find so reprehensible about SUVs? Is it the gas consumption? The size of the vehicle? SUVs are pretty much the same in size, shape, and gas consumption as minivans and pickup trucks. Some smaller SUVs get gas mileage that's comparable with sedans.

                      So what, exactly, are you upset about re: SUVs?

                    • Gas consumption, size and increased dangerousness to other people in crashes (SUV vs car as well as SUV vs person).

                      Minivans I don't mind because they tend to be driven out of necessity/utility, not as penis extenders. Trucks are no issue around here, so I don't really have any opinion on them; but I'm guessing it'd be along the lines of minivans.

              • by Jetboy01 ( 550638 ) on Monday November 30, 2009 @06:25AM (#30268654) Homepage

                They flip on a dime. True story: saw an accident between a Honda Del Sol [swaqvalley.com] and a Ford Expedition* at an intersection. The Del Sol was dented but able to drive away from the scene while the Expedition was flipped, turned upside down...

                And I'd like to take a second just sit right there, I'll tell you how I became the prince of a town called Bel Air.

              • by jeti ( 105266 )

                Seeing is believing: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P6bjtuAbIz4 [youtube.com]

              • by Bengie ( 1121981 )

                Saw the same type of situation with a new VW Bug and an F150. The hump on the bug was flattened a bit and had some visible scratching from my ~30' driving past slowly. The truck was on it's side with the whole lower side door pushed up a foot and all the windows broken. What seemed to have happened is the lower part of the car went under the truck and the curve of the hood pushed the door up as it wedged under and flipped it. It couldn't have hit too fast because the car looked like rubber hammer and some p

    • Re: (Score:1, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      So, what connections are formed when one learns to drive a motor vehicle?

      Seems that the "posting task" for some reduces the number of connections by half.

    • Speaking as a pedestrian, I believe that synapse connections disappear as one learns to drive.

  • Thats how long it seems to take between starting to learn something and getting it properly. Learning a new, totally different programming language would take that long for me. But the transition, when it comes is very fast.

  • Coarse muscle control comes from your motor cortex, fine control and feedback loop for motor movement through the posterior lobe of your cerebellum. Driving a motor vehicle requires in fact a lot of motor coordination, most people can learn how to. Note, however, that making an intelligent joke in the first post requires a much more complicated mechanism.
  • ... but reconfiguring the body from bones up (to compensate for aquired deficits regarding posture, e.g. by continued abuse while sitting in front of a screen) takes much longer. At least, this is my experience.

    CC.
  • Does anyone have a car analogy to help with this one?

    • Re: (Score:1, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Does anyone have a car analogy to help with this one?

      Sadly not, but I can use an Internet analogy.

      As the Internet acquires more porn, the number of tubes that are plumbed increases faster than they do for any other situation; because of the huge demand for porn, porn tubes have become faster to build and deploy. As a consequence, porn is more readily available; the Internet has "learned" to have more porn.

      --Ted Stevens

      • Best internet analogy ever. Mod parent up!
      • You forgot that the number of porn holes has increased at roughly the same rate as the number of porn tubes. Else, where would you plug in all those porn tubes?

        O, and there are 2 kinds of porn holes.

  • I get it. the brain is big enough for me, my alternate personalities, my paranoid delusions, my subconscious and the useful part dealing with the heartlungsstomach thingies.
    I thought various experiences just put information in my memory. But if experiences can actually rewire the brain, where does that lead me? is "I" rewirable too?
    Thanks for nothing. now my day will be spent on purposeless pondering of the nature of me.

    • "I" *is* the sum total of your wiring, so yes, you are rewireable.
    • by maxume ( 22995 )

      Here's a positive spin: Do you really want people to think that you are the same person you were 10 years ago?

      • I read your reply so I "experienced" it.
        Thus "I" just died inside. And you're saying it's a good thing.

        (my wife keeps telling me to stop making bad jokes, but she doesn't see me here)

  • Woah (Score:4, Informative)

    by Nazlfrag ( 1035012 ) on Monday November 30, 2009 @08:19AM (#30269158) Journal

    I just learned kung-fu.

  • Comment removed (Score:3, Interesting)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Monday November 30, 2009 @10:25AM (#30270226)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by tburkhol ( 121842 )

      Dogma has been that the brain does two kinds of learning - short term and long term. Short term learning happens within a few (or even a single) depolarization, lasts for a few hours, and is perfect for learning that the path is wet today. Long term learning has been seen as a separate, but related process, where repeated neural activity triggers new protein synthesis, and that synthesis results in new synapse formation. That process is thought to require repetition over minutes to hours, results in lear

    • Having hiked the Flume, I'd never go _DOWN_ the slide trail. As an avid hiker, the synapses in my brain do everything possible to avoid steep descents.

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