Representational Image.
New York:
Researchers have found evidence that a shell-shaped region in the centre of the mammalian brain is likely responsible for the ability to routinely and seamlessly multitask.
Researchers at NYU Langone Medical Center found that the thalamic reticular nucleus or TRN helps the brain multitask.
The process, they suggest, is done by individual TRN neurons that act like a "switchboard," continuously filtering sensory information and shifting more or less attention onto one sense - like sight - while relatively blocking out distracting information from other senses, including sound.
In their research in mice, the investigators showed that TRN neurons, which have been previously implicated in the dampening of brain signals in people, were also less active when the mice were led to focus on - and respond to - a visual flash of light to get a milk reward.
In contrast, when the mice were made to pay attention to a sound and ignore the flash of light, researchers said TRN neurons that controlled vision were more active, suppressing the visual signals in order to pay more attention to the sound.
Earlier research by the same team of scientists showed that different TRN neurons controlled specific senses.
"Our latest research findings support a newly emerging model of how the brain focuses attention on a particular task, using neurons in the thalamic reticular nucleus as a switchboard to control the amount of information the brain receives, limiting and filtering out sensory information that we don't want to pay attention to," said senior study investigator and neuroscientist Michael Halassa.
"Filtering out distracting or irrelevant information is a vital function," said Mr Halassa, an assistant professor of neuroscience and psychiatry at NYU Langone and its Druckenmiller Neuroscience Institute.
"People need to be able to focus on one thing and suppress other distractions to perform everyday functions such as driving, talking on the phone, and socialising," he said.
According to Mr Halassa, the new research sets the stage for ever more detailed studies on the complex behaviour involved in how the mammalian brain pays attention to what's important, and especially how those neural circuits are broken in cases of attention-deficit diseases, such as ADHD, autism, and schizophrenia.
The study is published in the journal Nature.
Researchers at NYU Langone Medical Center found that the thalamic reticular nucleus or TRN helps the brain multitask.
The process, they suggest, is done by individual TRN neurons that act like a "switchboard," continuously filtering sensory information and shifting more or less attention onto one sense - like sight - while relatively blocking out distracting information from other senses, including sound.
In their research in mice, the investigators showed that TRN neurons, which have been previously implicated in the dampening of brain signals in people, were also less active when the mice were led to focus on - and respond to - a visual flash of light to get a milk reward.
In contrast, when the mice were made to pay attention to a sound and ignore the flash of light, researchers said TRN neurons that controlled vision were more active, suppressing the visual signals in order to pay more attention to the sound.
Earlier research by the same team of scientists showed that different TRN neurons controlled specific senses.
"Our latest research findings support a newly emerging model of how the brain focuses attention on a particular task, using neurons in the thalamic reticular nucleus as a switchboard to control the amount of information the brain receives, limiting and filtering out sensory information that we don't want to pay attention to," said senior study investigator and neuroscientist Michael Halassa.
"Filtering out distracting or irrelevant information is a vital function," said Mr Halassa, an assistant professor of neuroscience and psychiatry at NYU Langone and its Druckenmiller Neuroscience Institute.
"People need to be able to focus on one thing and suppress other distractions to perform everyday functions such as driving, talking on the phone, and socialising," he said.
According to Mr Halassa, the new research sets the stage for ever more detailed studies on the complex behaviour involved in how the mammalian brain pays attention to what's important, and especially how those neural circuits are broken in cases of attention-deficit diseases, such as ADHD, autism, and schizophrenia.
The study is published in the journal Nature.
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