Scientists have designed a brain implant that restored lost memory  function and strengthened recall of new information in laboratory rats —  a crucial first step in the development of so-called neuroprosthetic  devices to repair deficits from dementia, stroke and other brain injuries in humans.
Though still a long way from being tested in humans, the implant  demonstrates for the first time that a cognitive function can be  improved with a device that mimics the firing patterns of neurons. In  recent years neuroscientists have developed implants that allow  paralyzed people to move prosthetic limbs or a computer cursor, using  their thoughts to activate the machines. In the new work, being  published Friday, researchers at Wake Forest University and the  University of Southern California used some of the same techniques to  read neural activity. But they translated those signals internally, to  improve brain function rather than to activate outside appendages.
“It’s technically very impressive to pull something like this off, given  our current level of technology,” said Daryl Kipke, a professor of  bioengineering at the University of Michigan who was not involved in the  experiment. “We are just scratching the surface when it comes to  interacting with the brain, but this experiment shows what’s possible  and the great potential of interacting with the brain in this way.”         
In a series of experiments, scientists at Wake Forest led by Sam A.  Deadwyler trained rats to remember which of two identical levers to  press to receive water; the animals first saw one of the two levers  appear and then (after being distracted) had to remember to press the  other lever to be rewarded. Repeated training on this task teaches rats  the general rule, but in each trial the animal has to remember which  lever appeared first, to inform the later choice.
The rats were implanted with a tiny array of electrodes, which threaded  from the top of the head down into two neighboring pieces of the  hippocampus, a structure that is crucial for forming these new memories,  in rats as in humans. The two slivers of tissue, called CA1 and CA3,  communicate with each other as the brain learns and stores new  information. The device transmits these exchanges to a computer.        
To test the effect of the implant, the researchers used a drug to shut  down the activity of CA1. Without CA1 online, the rats could not  remember which lever to push to get water. They remembered the rule —  push the opposite lever of the one that first appeared — but not which  they had seen first.
The researchers, having recorded the appropriate signal from CA1, simply  replayed it, like a melody on a player piano — and the animals  remembered. The implant acted as if it were CA1, at least for this one  task.        
“Turn the switch on, the animal has the memory; turn it off and they  don’t: that’s exactly how it worked,” said Theodore W. Berger, a  professor of engineering at U.S.C. and the lead author of the study,  being published in The Journal of Neural Engineering. His co-authors  were Robert E. Hampson and Anushka Goonawardena, along with Dr.  Deadwyler, of Wake Forest, and Dong Song and Vasilis Z. Marmarelis of  U.S.C.        
In rats that did not receive the drug, new memories faded by about 40  percent after a long distraction period. But if the researchers  amplified the corresponding CA1 signals using the implant, the memories  eroded only about 10 percent in that time.
The authors said that with wireless technology and computer chips, the  system could be easily fitted for human use. But there are a number of  technical and theoretical obstacles. For one, the implant must first  record a memory trace before playing it back or amplifying it; in  patients with significant memory problems, those signals may be too  weak. In addition, human memory is a rich, diverse neural process that  involves many other brain areas, not just CA3 and CA1; implants in this  area will be limited.        
Still, some restored memories — Where is the bathroom? Where are the  pots and pans stored? — could make a big difference in the lives of  someone with dementia. “If you’re caring for someone in the house, for  example,” Dr. Berger said, “it might be enough to keep the person out of  the nursing home.”
Source The New York Times
 
 
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