Tuesday, 26 November 2013
On 21:10 by Asveth Sreiram No comments
A University of British Columbia study published in Nature Neuroscience says the lateral habenula, a region of the brain linked to depression and avoidance behaviours, has been largely misunderstood and may be integral in cost-benefit decisions.
"These findings clarify the brain processes involved in the important decisions that we make on a daily basis, from choosing between job offers to deciding which house or car to buy," says Prof. Stan Floresco of UBC's Dept. of Psychology and Brain Research Centre (BRC). "It also suggests that the scientific community has misunderstood the true functioning of this mysterious, but important, region of the brain."
In the study, scientists trained lab rats to choose between a consistent small reward (one food pellet) or a potentially larger reward (four food pellets) that appeared sporadically. Like humans, the rats tended to choose larger rewards when costs -- in this case, the amount of time they had to wait before receiving food-were low and preferred smaller rewards when such risks were higher.
Previous studies suggest that turning off the lateral habenula would cause rats to choose the larger, riskier reward more often, but that was not the case. Instead, the rats selected either option at random, no longer showing the ability to choose the best option for them.
The findings have important implications for depression treatment. "Deep brain stimulation -- which is thought to inactivate the lateral habenula -- has been reported to improve depressive symptoms in humans," Floresco says. "But our findings suggest these improvements may not be because patients feel happier. They may simply no longer care as much about what is making them feel depressed."
Background
Floresco, who conducted the study with PhD candidate Colin Stopper, says more investigation is needed to understand the complete brain functions involved in cost-benefit decision processes and related behaviour. A greater understanding of decision-making processes is also crucial, they say, because many psychiatric disorders, such as schizophrenia, stimulant abuse and depression, are associated with impairments in these processes.
The lateral habenula is considered one of the oldest regions of the brain, evolution-wise, the researchers say
.
.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Search
Popular Posts
-
A team of scientists using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has made the most detailed global map yet of the glow from a planet orbiti...
-
Aug. 29, 2013 — The age at which children learn a second language can have a significant bearing on the structure of their adult brain, ...
-
Nov. 2, 2013 — It doesn't take a Watson to realize that even the world's best supercomputers are staggeringly inefficient and ene...
-
Oct. 3, 2013 — Scientists have revealed nearly 100 genetic variants implicated in the development of cancers such as breast cancer and pr...
-
Nov. 1, 2013 — It was once thought that each cell in a person's body possesses the same DNA code and that the particular way the geno...
-
Oct. 30, 2013 — Video gaming causes increases in the brain regions responsible for spatial orientation, memory formation and strategic pl...
-
What you'll need: A plastic comb (or an inflated balloon) A narrow stream of water from a tap Dry hair Instructions: Tu...
-
Aug. 26, 2013 — Where did the Chelyabinsk meteorite come from? As a meteoroid, it either collided with another body in the solar system ...
-
Dec. 13, 2013 — South Pole Telescope scientists have detected for the first time a subtle distortion in the oldest light in the universe,...
-
This image shows two of the galaxy clusters Aug. 1, 2013 — Our universe is filled with gobs of galaxies, bound together by gravity...
Recent Posts
Sample Text
Blog Archive
-
▼
2013
(421)
-
▼
November
(38)
- Mach 1000 Shock Wave Lights Supernova Remnant
- Archaeological Discoveries Confirm Early Date of B...
- Scientists Find Brain Region That Helps You Make U...
- Even If Emissions Stop, Carbon Dioxide Could Warm ...
- Colossal New Predatory Dino Terrorized Early Tyran...
- Does Obesity Reshape Our Sense of Taste?
- The Era of Neutrino Astronomy Has Begun
- Two Y Genes Can Replace the Entire Y Chromosome fo...
- Monster Gamma-Ray Burst in Our Cosmic Neighborhood
- Genomic Variant Associated With Sun Sensitivity, F...
- Brain Regions Can Be Specifically Trained With Vid...
- Computer Searches Web 24/7 to Analyze Images and T...
- Specially Designed Nanostructured Materials Can In...
- Black Holes Don't Make a Big Splash
- Neanderthal Viruses Found in Modern Humans
- Skeletal Remains of 24,000-Year-Old Boy Raise New ...
- Secrets of Mars' Birth Revealed from Unique Meteorite
- CT and 3-D Printers Used to Recreate Dinosaur Fossils
- World's Smallest FM Radio Transmitter
- Biologists Find an Evolutionary Facebook for Monke...
- The Big Male Nose: Why Men's Noses Are Bigger Than...
- Bacteria Recycle Broken DNA: Modern Bacteria Can A...
- Evidence Found for Granite On Mars: Red Planet Mor...
- Hubble Reveals First Scrapbook Pictures of Milky W...
- Astronomers Reveal Contents of Mysterious Black Ho...
- Better Batteries Through Biology? Modified Viruses...
- Evidence of 3.5-Billion-Year-Old Bacterial Ecosyst...
- Thin, Active Invisibility Cloak Demonstrated for F...
- Clay May Have Been Birthplace of Life On Earth, Ne...
- How Pigeons May Smell Their Way Home
- How Common Are Habitable Planets? One in Five Sun-...
- Fossil of Largest Known Platypus Discovered in Aus...
- Physicist Discovers Black Holes in Globular Star C...
- Life, but Not as We Know It: Rudimentary Form of L...
- Global Warming Led to Dwarfism in Mammals -- Twice
- Synaptic Transistor Learns While It Computes
- Surprising Variation Among Genomes of Individual N...
- Magnetic 'Force Field' Shields Giant Gas Cloud Dur...
-
▼
November
(38)
0 comments:
Post a Comment