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1.
Neurosci Biobehav Rev ; 163: 105744, 2024 May 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38825259

ABSTRACT

Every species' brain, body and behavior is shaped by the contingencies of their evolutionary history; these exert pressures that change their developmental trajectories. There is, however, another set of contingencies that shape us and other animals: those that occur during a lifetime. In this perspective piece, we show how these two histories are intertwined by focusing on the individual. We suggest that organisms--their brains and behaviors--are not solely the developmental products of genes and neural circuitry but individual centers of action unfolding in time. To unpack this idea, we first emphasize the importance of variation and the central role of the individual in biology. We then go over "errors in time" that we often make when comparing development across species. Next, we reveal how an individual's development is a process rather than a product by presenting a set of case studies. These show developmental trajectories as emerging in the contexts of the "the actual now" and "the presence of the past". Our consideration reveals that individuals are slippery-they are never static; they are a set of on-going, creative activities. In light of this, it seems that taking individual development seriously is essential if we aspire to make meaningful comparisons of neural circuits and behavior within and across species.

2.
Science ; 383(6686): 955, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38422148

ABSTRACT

Embracing our role as active participants in the Universe should be a vital part of science, contend a trio of authors.

3.
eNeuro ; 10(11)2023 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37963655
4.
Science ; 382(6667): 162, 2023 Oct 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37824656

ABSTRACT

A foundational text that articulated the modern scientific method turns 400.

5.
Science ; 381(6657): 489, 2023 Aug 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37535718

ABSTRACT

An anniversary offers scientists an opportunity to revisit the work of an audacious physicist.

6.
Neuroscientist ; : 10738584231179932, 2023 Jul 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37403768

ABSTRACT

The beginnings of cybernetics were marked by the publication of two papers in 1943. In the first one, Rosenblueth, Wiener, and Bigelow claimed that purposeful behavior is a circular process controlled by negative feedback. In the second seminal paper, McCulloch and Pitts proposed that neurons are interconnected working as logical operators. Both articles raised human-machine analogies and mathematically formulated cognitive mechanisms. These ideas ignited the interest of von Neumann, who was developing the first stored-program computer. Thus, after a preliminary meeting in 1945, a series of meetings were held between 1946 and 1953. The role of the Spanish neurophysiologist Rafael Lorente de Nó in the beginnings of cybernetics is attested not only by his participation in the core members of these Macy conferences but also for his previous description of reverberating circuits formed by a closed chain of internuncial neurons. This was the first neurobiologic demonstration of a feedback loop. Most researchers considered the central nervous system as a mere reflex organ until then; nevertheless, he demonstrated a self-sustained central activity in the nervous system, supporting the idea of self-regulating mechanisms as a key concept not just in machines but also in the brain.

7.
Science ; 380(6640): 44, 2023 04 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37023201

ABSTRACT

A physicist attempts to reconcile inspiring experiences with materialistic beliefs.

8.
Science ; 379(6630): 338, 2023 Jan 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36701464

ABSTRACT

A powerful 21st-century medium affords new opportunities for learning and creative thinking.

9.
Science ; 378(6620): 606, 2022 Nov 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36356122

ABSTRACT

The brain is a relational organ that is not just the sum of its parts.

10.
Gigascience ; 112022 10 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36261217

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Beyond their specific experiment, video records of behavior have future value-for example, as inputs for new experiments or for yet unknown types of analysis of behavior-similar to tissue or blood sample banks in life sciences where clinically derived or otherwise well-described experimental samples are stored to be available for some unknown potential future purpose. FINDINGS: Research using an animal model of obsessive-compulsive disorder employed a standardized paradigm where the behavior of rats in a large open field was video recorded for 55 minutes on each test. From 43 experiments, there are 19,976 such trials that amount to over 2 years of continuous recording. In addition to videos, there are 2 video-derived raw data objects: XY locomotion coordinates and plots of animal trajectory. To motivate future use, the 3 raw data objects are annotated with a general schema-one that abstracts the data records from their particular experiment while providing, at the same time, a detailed list of independent variables bearing on behavioral performance. The raw data objects are deposited as 43 datasets but constitute, functionally, a library containing 1 large dataset. CONCLUSIONS: Size and annotation schema give the library high reuse potential: in applications using machine learning techniques, statistical evaluation of subtle factors, simulation of new experiments, or as educational resource. Ultimately, the library can serve both as the seed and as the test bed to create a machine-searchable virtual library of linked open datasets for behavioral performance in defined conditions.


Subject(s)
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder , Rodentia , Rats , Animals , Libraries, Digital , Disease Models, Animal , Brain
11.
J R Soc Interface ; 19(195): 20220480, 2022 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36195116

ABSTRACT

Wisdom of the Crowd is the aggregation of many individual estimates to obtain a better collective one. Because of its enormous social potential, this effect has been thoroughly investigated, but predominantly on tasks that involve rational thinking (such as estimating a number). Here we tested this effect in the context of drawing geometrical shapes, which still enacts cognitive processes but mainly involves visuomotor control. We asked more than 700 school students to trace five patterns shown on a touchscreen and then aggregated their individual trajectories to improve the match with the original pattern. Our results show the characteristics of the strongest examples of Wisdom of the Crowd. First, the aggregate trajectory can be up to 5 times more accurate than the individual ones. Second, this great improvement requires aggregating trajectories from different individuals (rather than trials from the same individual). Third, the aggregate trajectory outperforms more than 99% of individual trajectories. Fourth, while older individuals outperform younger ones, a crowd of young individuals outperforms the average older one. These results demonstrate for the first time Wisdom of the Crowd in the realm of motor control, opening the door to further studies of human and also animal behavioural trajectories and their mechanistic underpinnings.


Subject(s)
Interpersonal Relations , Motor Skills , Humans , Students
12.
Behav Brain Sci ; 45: e196, 2022 09 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36172772

ABSTRACT

Neuroscience needs theory. Ideas without data are blind, and yet mechanisms without concepts are empty. Friston's free energy principle paradigmatically illustrates the power and pitfalls of current theoretical biology. Mighty metaphors, turned into mathematical models, can become mindless metaphysics. Then, seeking to understand everything in principle, we may explain nothing in practice. Life can't live in a map.

13.
Science ; 377(6603): 268, 2022 07 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35857585

ABSTRACT

What are they for-who has them and why?

14.
Front Neurorobot ; 16: 861831, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35392449
15.
Science ; 375(6586): 1237, 2022 Mar 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35298271

ABSTRACT

A new biography celebrates the Spaniard who founded modern neuroscience.

16.
Science ; 374(6568): 696, 2021 Nov 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34735235

ABSTRACT

Bodies and feelings are foundational to conscious experience, argues a neuroscientist.

17.
Front Neurorobot ; 15: 755723, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34776921

ABSTRACT

The control architecture guiding simple movements such as reaching toward a visual target remains an open problem. The nervous system needs to integrate different sensory modalities and coordinate multiple degrees of freedom in the human arm to achieve that goal. The challenge increases due to noise and transport delays in neural signals, non-linear and fatigable muscles as actuators, and unpredictable environmental disturbances. Here we examined the capabilities of hierarchical feedback control models proposed by W. T. Powers, so far only tested in silico. We built a robot arm system with four degrees of freedom, including a visual system for locating the planar position of the hand, joint angle proprioception, and pressure sensing in one point of contact. We subjected the robot to various human-inspired reaching and tracking tasks and found features of biological movement, such as isochrony and bell-shaped velocity profiles in straight-line movements, and the speed-curvature power law in curved movements. These behavioral properties emerge without trajectory planning or explicit optimization algorithms. We then applied static structural perturbations to the robot: we blocked the wrist joint, tilted the writing surface, extended the hand with a tool, and rotated the visual system. For all of them, we found that the arm in machina adapts its behavior without being reprogrammed. In sum, while limited in speed and precision (by the nature of the do-it-yourself inexpensive components we used to build the robot from scratch), when faced with the noise, delays, non-linearities, and unpredictable disturbances of the real world, the embodied control architecture shown here balances biological realism with design simplicity.

18.
Bioessays ; 43(6): e2100055, 2021 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33751607

ABSTRACT

Despite the triumphant rhetoric of mechanistic materialism, current biology has no shortage of unsolved fundamental problems. In 1981, seeking a way forward, Rupert Sheldrake proposed the hypothesis of "formative causation" as a unifying organizing principle of life. Expanding the concept of morphogenetic fields, Sheldrake posited a spatio-temporal connection termed "morphic resonance" whereby the more often a self-organizing process takes place, the easier it will be for it to take place in the future. After initial acclaim, his project was quickly met with dogmatic skepticism, dismissed as scientific heresy, and ultimately ignored. Forty years later, the experimental implications of his ideas remain largely untested. Visionary or not, Sheldrake's case illustrates the conceptual resistance of the scientific enterprise to revise its own deepest theoretical commitments. Beyond career-building selection pressures, young researchers need to be presented with the major questions in their field and encouraged to entertain radically alternative points of view. Science is what scientists make of it.


Subject(s)
Biology , Morphogenesis
19.
eNeuro ; 8(2)2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33648976

Subject(s)
Brain , Cognition
20.
Heliyon ; 6(10): e05260, 2020 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33088983

ABSTRACT

How episodic memories decay is an unresolved question in cognitive neuroscience. The role of short-term mechanisms regarding the decay of episodic memories is circumscribed to set the maximum recall from which a monotonic decay occurs. However, this sequential view from the short to the long-term is not compulsory, as short-term dependent memory gains (like recency effects when memorizing a list of elements; serial-position effects) may not be translated into long-term memory differences. Moreover, producing memorable events in the laboratory faces important challenges, such as recreating realistic conditions with elevated recall, or avoiding spontaneous retrievals during memory retention (sociocultural hooks). The current study proposes the use of magic to enhance the study of memory. We designed a sequence of magic tricks performed live on stage to evaluate the interaction between memory decay and serial-position effects of those tricks. The audience was asked to freely recall the tricks at four different timepoints: just after the show, 10 days, 1.5 months and 4.5 months. We discovered serial-position differences after the show that were no longer present later on, suggesting that short-term memory gains do not translate into the long-term. Illustrating the power of naturalistic stimuli to study long-term memory while interrogating the interaction between short-term and long-term mechanisms, this work is, to our knowledge, the first scientific study of the memorability of magic tricks.

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