Summary: Researchers have developed a groundbreaking technique to “write” new learning patterns directly into the brain using real-time neurofeedback from fMRI imaging. Participants in the study learned new visual object categories without explicit teaching, as their brain activity was subtly shaped to align with predesignated patterns.
This approach demonstrates that it’s possible to directly sculpt neural responses, potentially paving the way for innovative treatments for neuropsychiatric and developmental disorders. The findings offer unprecedented insights into the building blocks of learning and how the brain processes information.
Key Facts:
- Neural Sculpting: Researchers used real-time neurofeedback to directly alter brain activity, creating new visual learning patterns.
- Implicit Learning: Participants learned new categories without conscious awareness, highlighting the power of implicit neural training.
- Clinical Potential: This technique could lead to novel treatments for conditions like autism and depression by reshaping brain patterns.
Source: University of Rochester
Imagine being able to inscribe a new pattern of activity into a person’s brain that would allow for faster learning, or better treatment of psychiatric and developmental disorders such as depression or autism. Now imagine being able to do that in a way that doesn’t require brain surgery or any physical manipulation. Sounds like science fiction?
It still is. But that’s exactly what Coraline Iordan, an assistant professor of brain and cognitive sciences and of neuroscience at the University of Rochester has been working toward, showing for the first time that it can certainly be done for learning new visual categories of objects.
Generally, learning happens when our brain changes through experience, study, or instruction. But Iordan and colleagues at Yale and Princeton successfully tested a novel approach for teaching the human brain to learn through external manipulation and neural feedback—what they call the “sculpting” of brain activity patterns.
The research appears in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
“With our method not only can we nudge complex patterns around in the brain toward known ones, but also—for the first time—write directly a new pattern into the brain and measure what effect that has on a person’s behavior,” says lead author Iordan.
Brain sculpting—a new approach to learning?
The scientists used real-time neuroimaging and second-by-second neurofeedback to modify how the brain represents and processes information about visual objects. Lying inside a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) machine, study participants viewed objects projected onto a mirror above their heads, which looked like a small screen.
The object—an abstract shape that some participants described as a petal, plant bulb, or butterfly—pulsed gently on the participants’ mirror until they managed to “move it” by their own thought processes to the pattern of activity in their brain (monitored via fMRI in real time) that the scientists had previously chosen.
The researchers instructed the participants to “generate a mental state” that would reduce the shape’s oscillation but had not taught the study participants how to achieve such mental state.
“One of the striking features of the study is that the neural responses and corresponding behavior to the new categories occurred without explicit awareness of those categories, showing that a long tradition of work in psychology on implicit processing—that is, the ability to respond to information meaningfully outside of awareness—also extends to the learning and formation of new neural representations,” says coauthor Jonathan Cohen, a cognitive neuroscientist at Princeton University.
The immediate feedback given to the study participants here meant that the image stopped wobbling on their mirror once they successfully managed to represent the visual object more similarly to a brain activity pattern that the researchers had previously designated, instead of how the object would have been represented in their brains naturally.
In other words, the scientists had developed a method that caused people to learn new categories of visual objects, not by teaching them what the categories were, but by changing how their brains worked when they looked at the individual objects in those categories.
“Instead of teaching you something and measuring how your brain changes, we wrote a new category into your brain that would have appeared had you learned it yourself,” explains Iordan.
“Then we tested whether you saw the new category that we had inserted. Turns out you did.”
To ensure study participants were highly motivated to succeed, they were rewarded monetarily if they managed to stop the image wobble, which over six daily sessions could amount to a sizeable bonus.
Future applications
Scientists are working to better understand what exactly happens to brain function in people with a variety of neuropsychiatric, developmental, or psychological disorders, such as major depression, visual agnosias (the inability to recognize everyday items), and autism.
According to Iordan, a method like theirs may eventually play a role in clinical treatment by modifying the brain patterns of patients to make theirs look more similar to the brain patterns found in the neurotypical population, which down the road could lead to new approaches for treatment, either by itself or in conjunction with already existing therapies.
“This study is one of the most powerful demonstrations yet of brain training with real-time fMRI. Dr. Iordan used neurofeedback to help humans create a category in their mind that then influenced their behavior,” says coauthor Nicholas Turk-Browne, a psychologist at Yale University.
“In the future, this discovery could inform the development of brain-computer interfaces and clinical interventions.”
At its core lies the scientists’ ability to access the brain in a way that hasn’t been done before.
“We essentially turned learning on its head and taught your brain something that caused you to vicariously gain information, even though you were never explicitly given that information,” says Iordan.
“That tells us we have access to the building blocks of learning in the brain in a way that we haven’t had before—for learning things that are much more complicated, such as entire categories of items, complex visual things, or potentially even beyond that someday.”
Funding: The study was supported by funding from the John Templeton Foundation, Intel Corporation, and the National Institutes of Health.
About this learning and neuroscience research news
Author: Sandra Knispel
Source: University of Rochester
Contact: Sandra Knispel – University of Rochester
Image: The image is credited to Neuroscience News
Original Research: Open access.
“Sculpting new visual categories into the human brain” by Coraline Iordan et al. PNAS
Abstract
Sculpting new visual categories into the human brain
Learning requires changing the brain. This typically occurs through experience, study, or instruction. We report an alternate route for humans to acquire visual knowledge, through the direct sculpting of activity patterns in the human brain that mirror those expected to arise through learning.
We used neurofeedback from closed-loop real-time functional MRI to create new categories of visual objects in the brain, without the participants’ explicit awareness. After neural sculpting, participants exhibited behavioral and neural biases for the learned, but not for the control categories.
The ability to sculpt new perceptual distinctions into the human brain offers a noninvasive research paradigm for causal testing of the link between neural representations and behavior.
As such, beyond its current application to perception, our work potentially has broad relevance for advancing understanding in other domains of cognition such as decision-making, memory, and motor control.