Home Up Aging News Seniors Commentary California Report Caregiving_News.htm Community/Workplace Election 2012 'Smart Bombing' Diseases Fitness,Health Grandparents HealthCare Policy Hispanic Seniors Medicare News Prescription Drug News Resources, Links Rural Seniors Resources, links to seniors agencies, groups Safety & Security Seniors' Entertainment Seniors' Finances Seniors Relationships Social Security News The Virtual Family Travel News Veterans Tribute Privacy Statement Join Our Mailing List Aging Resources Store TSN Video News Rx for American Health New Page 12

 Home
Up
Aging Brains
Aging Brain Malleable
Anesthesia Risk in Elderly
Avoid Aging Brain
Bess Reverse Brain Aging
Bodyguard for Brain
Boot Camp for Brain
Brain and Lungs
Brain Communications Failure
Brain Computer Exesrcises
Brain Connections Important
Brain, Depression Link
Brain Fear and Panic
Brain Fitness Test
Brain Freeze
Brain Holds Aging Key
Brain Improvement Tips
Brain Memory Layers
Brain Plaque
Brain Processing Speed
Brain Records Memories
Brain Reorganizes Itself
Brain Training
Brain Training Effectiveness
Brain: Use It or Lose It
Cardiac Disease Link
Centenarian Cognition
Cognition, Longevity
Cognitive Decline Factors
Delirium Effect
Dementia, Aging Brain
Exercise Aids Brain
Good Mood Boosts Brain
'Grey Matter' Tips
How Aging Affects Brain
How the Brain Ages
NFL Players' Depression Risk
Old Dogs, New Tricks
Scan Indicates Intelligence
Scans Reveal Age
Seeing Brain Clearly
Sensory Perception Experience
Skin Cells into Brain Cells
Spsring Cleaning for Brain
SuperAger Brains
TBI Vision Problems
Traumatic Brain Injury
Understanding Cognition
White Matter Matters
Why We Buy Music
Worrying and Intelligence

 

 

Home
Activity, Cognitive Health
Age, Decision-Making
Aging,Cognition
Age-Related Cognitive Decline
Aging, Health, Cognition Link
Air Pollution Link
Attention Span Diminishes
Bingo Aids Cognition
Blood Pressure, Cognition
Brain and Cognition
Cancer, Memory Impairment
Cognition Motivation Link
Cognitive Behavior Therapy
Cognitive Center
Cognitive Decline Factors
Cognitive Decline Study
Cognitive Decline Start
Cognitive Disorders
Cognitive Health Perspective
Cogntive Loss Link
Cognition Loss, Kidney Function
Cognitive Scores Vary
Cognitive Stimulation
Damaging Thinking Skills
Dementia, Early Death
Diabetes, Cognitive Decline
Drug Aids Cognition
Drug Side-Effects Elderly
Early Menopause Surgery Link
Elderly Advice Best
Elderly Brain Training
Elderly Cognitive Decline
Elderly Decision-Making
Elderly Impariment
Elderly Lack Multitasking Skills
ER Changes Needed
Exercise Aids Cognition
Exercise Benefits to Brain
Everyday Cognition Scale
Exercise Improves Memory
Face Recognition
Fight Cognitive Decline
Fighting Brain Fatigue
FREE Brain Test
High Performance Brain
Immunological Fingerprint
Improving Cognition
Impairment Recognition
Keeping Mind Sharp
Keep Mental Skills Sharp
Little Understood Brain Disease
Maintain Health Brain
Medicare Cognitive Screening
Meditatilon Boosts Brain
Memory
Mental Aging Data
Memory Decline Before Death
Moderate Exercise Beneficial
MRI Predicts Decline
Musical Training Benefit
Neighbood Status Cognition Link
New Brain Cells
NFL Reitrees at Risk
No Postoperative Delirium
Online Test for Brain
One Miillion Brain Test Uses
Overeating, Memory Loss
Paranoia of Mind Slippage
Personality, Brain Size
Personality Change
Physical Activity Beneficial
Plaques Identify Decline
Playing Music Aids Cognition
Positive Emotional Perspective
Proactive Brain Health
Push-Ups for Brain
Puzzles, Games Role
Rate Age-Related Decline
Reading for Brain
Reduced Brain Ability
Road to Alzheimer's
Runaway Aging Brain
Sedentary Lifestyles  Harmful
Senior Response Time
Sense of Presence
Sepsis, Cognitive Issues
Sickle Cell Impact
Silent Disease Link
Sleep Blockage Evidence
Sleep Loss Cognition Risk
Slow Gait Decline Tip
Smarter 70-Year-Olds
Socializing  helps Elderly Women
Spring Cleaning the Mind
Sweet 16 Cogntitive Test
Testosterone Memory Boost
The Aging Brain
Therapy for Adults
Video Games Beneficial
Video Game Boosts Mind
Vision, Cognitive Link
Walking Aids Brain
Walking Benefit
Wiser Older Brains
WoW Improves Functions

 

Google

 

 

Web

TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com

Share with friends, community with Add This! service above!
 

AddThis Feed Button   Now, keep up to date with daily feeds of newly posted stories about America's Seniors...click on the box to the left 
 
Be the first of your friends to like this.

Max Planck Florida Institute Study shows: Persistent Sensory Experience is good for the Aging Brain

May 31, 2012 --Despite a long-held scientific belief that much of the wiring of the brain is fixed by the time of adolescence, a new study shows that changes in sensory experience can cause massive rewiring of the brain, even as one ages.

In addition, the study found that this rewiring involves fibers that supply the primary input to the cerebral cortex, the part of the brain that is responsible for sensory perception, motor control and cognition. These findings promise to open new avenues of research on brain remodeling and aging.

 

“This study overturns decades-old beliefs that most of the brain is hard-wired before a critical period that ends when one is a young adult,” said MPFI neuroscientist Marcel Oberlaender, PhD, first author on the paper.

 “By changing the nature of sensory experience, we were able to demonstrate that the brain can rewire, even at an advanced age. This may suggest that if one stops learning and experiencing new things as one ages, a substantial amount of connections within the brain may be lost.”

The researchers conducted their study by examining the brains of older rats, focusing on an area of the brain known as the thalamus, which processes and delivers information obtained from sensory organs to the cerebral cortex. 

Connections between the thalamus and the cortex have been thought to stop changing by early adulthood, but this was not found to be the case in the rodents studied.

 

Being nocturnal animals, rats mainly rely on their whiskers as active sensory organs to explore and navigate their environment. For this reason, the whisker system is an ideal model for studying whether the brain can be remodeled by changing sensory experience.

By simply trimming the whiskers, and preventing the rats from receiving this important and frequent form of sensory input, the scientists sought to determine whether extensive rewiring of the connections between the thalamus and cortex would occur.

On examination, they found that the animals with trimmed whiskers had altered axons, nerve fibers along which information is conveyed from one neuron (nerve cell) to many others; those whose whiskers were not trimmed had no axonal changes.

Their findings were particularly striking as the rats were considered relatively old – meaning that this rewiring can still take place at an age not previously thought possible.

Also notable was that the rewiring happened rapidly – in as little as a few days.

“We’ve shown that the structure of the rodent brain is in constant flux, and that this rewiring is shaped by sensory experience and interaction with the environment,” said Dr. Oberlaender.

“These changes seem to be life-long and may pertain to other sensory systems and species, including people. Our findings open the possibility of new avenues of research on development of the aging brain using quantitative anatomical studies combined with noninvasive imaging technologies suitable for humans, such as functional MRI (fMRI).”

The study was possible due to recent advances in high-resolution imaging and reconstruction techniques, developed in part by Dr. Oberlaender at MPFI.

These novel methods enable researchers to automatically and reliably trace the fine and complex branching patterns of individual axons, with typical diameters less than a thousandth of a millimeter, throughout the entire brain.

Dr. Oberlaender is part of the Max Planck Florida Institute’s Digital Neuroanatomy group, led by Nobel laureate Dr. Bert Sakmann.

The group focuses on the functional anatomy of circuits in the cerebral cortex that form the basis of simple behaviors (e.g. decision making). One of the group’s most significant efforts is a program dedicated to obtaining a three-dimensional map of the rodent brain.

This work will provide insight into the functional architecture of entire cortical areas, and will lay the foundation for a mechanistic understanding of sensory perception and behavior.

This study was carried out in collaboration with the group of Dr. Randy M. Bruno in the Neuroscience Department of Columbia University, New York.

About the Max Planck Florida Institute

The first institute established by Germany’s prestigious Max Planck Society outside of Europe, the Max Planck Florida Institute is also the first research institute of its kind in North America.  MPFI seeks to provide new insight into understanding the functional organization of the nervous system, its capacity to produce perception, thought, language, memory, emotion, and action. Neural circuits, the complex synaptic networks of the brain, hold the key to understanding who we are, why we behave the way we do, and how the debilitating effects of neurological and psychiatric disorders can be ameliorated. MPFI meets this challenge by forging links between different levels of analysis—genetic, molecular, cellular, circuit, and behavioral—and developing new technologies that make cutting edge scientific discoveries possible. For more information, visit www.maxplanckflorida.org

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Download our new Android Apps for RxforAmericanHealth.blog or TodaysSeniorsNetwork.  Load them directly onto your mobile device by opening your device, opening your browser and entering either todaysseniorsnetwork or rxforamerican's health in the search box, then, when the app icon appears,  click download, then after download, click install. Or, click here to install both apps directly from the web to your phone.

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
    

Copyright 2000-2013 TodaysSeniorsNetwork

 

Contact Us