Daffodil International University

DIU Activities => Daffodil Institute of Languages (DIL) => Topic started by: azizur.bba on April 21, 2017, 09:06:26 PM

Title: Thoughts Derailed
Post by: azizur.bba on April 21, 2017, 09:06:26 PM
The same brain mechanism by which surprising events interrupt movements may also be involved in disrupting cognition, according to a study.
By Tanya Lewis | April 18, 2016
Scientists may have an explanation for why startling events like a phone ringing can disrupt one’s train of thought. By recording the brain activities of healthy people and patients with Parkinson’s disease, researchers at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD), found that the brain mechanism involved in stopping body movements is activated when memory is disrupted, according to a study published yesterday (April 18) in Nature Communications.
“The radically new idea is that just as the brain's stopping mechanism is involved in stopping what we're doing with our bodies it might also be responsible for interrupting and flushing out our thoughts,” study coauthor Adam Aron of UCSD said in a statement.
To test this hypothesis, study coauthor Jan Wessel, a postdoc in Aron’s lab, and colleagues measured EEG signals from the scalps of 20 healthy participants, as well as signals from electrodes implanted in the brains of seven people with Parkinson’s disease. The participants were presented with a string of letters to remember, but before they had to recall them, they heard a simple tone. In a handful of trials, the participants heard a snippet of birdsong instead of the tone.
As expected, the participants had worse recall after hearing the birdsong, compared with hearing the simple tone. And hearing the surprising sound also triggered increased activity in a region deep in the basal ganglia called the subthalamic nucleus (STN), part of a brain network previously shown to be involved in stopping bodily movements. This type of brain activity also explains why Parkinson’s patients sometimes freeze or can have trouble changing focus.
The mechanism for losing one’s train of thought might have evolved as an adaptation to threats in the environment, such as encountering a lion in the bushes, the researchers speculated.
 “It might also be potentially interesting to see if this system could be engaged deliberately,” Wessel said in the statement, “and actively used to interrupt intrusive thoughts or unwanted memories.”