New Western University research shows
that neurons in the part of the brain found to be abnormal in psychosis
are also important in helping people distinguish between reality and
imagination.
The researchers, Dr. Julio Martinez-Trujillo, principal investigator and professor at Western University’s Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry and Dr. Diego Mendoza-Halliday, postdoctoral researcher at M.I.T.,
investigated how the brain codes visual information in reality versus
abstract information in our working memory and how those differences are
distributed across neurons in the lateral prefrontal cortex region of
the brain. The results were published in Nature Communications.
“You can look at my shirt, and then if I move out of your vision,
even with your eyes open you can still see the colour of my shirt in
your mind,” explained Martinez-Trujillo, based at the Brain and Mind Institute and Robarts Research Institute
at Western University. “That is what we call working memory
representations or short-term memory representations – they are
abstract, they are imaginary and they don’t exist in reality, but in our
minds. Real objects in our visual field, we call perceptual
representations. We are trying to determine whether there are neurons in
the brain that can signal to a person whether a representation is real
or imaginary.”
By having subjects perform two tasks – one where they had to report
the direction of movement of a cloud of dots they could see on a
computer screen, and one where they had to report the cloud direction a
few seconds after it disappeared based on a memory of the image – they
found that neurons in the Lateral Prefrontal Cortex encoded perceived
and memorized information to various degrees and in different
combinations of strength.
“We might have expected that the neurons that are active when we
perceive a visual object are the same ones that memorize it; or, on the
contrary, that one group of neurons perceives the object and a
completely different group memorizes it; but instead, we found that all
of the above are true to a certain extent,” said Mendoza-Halliday, first
author on the study. “We have perception neurons, memory neurons, and
also neurons that do both things.”
The Lateral Prefrontal Cortex has been shown to be dysfunctional in
individuals with schizophrenia, who have hallucinations or delusions.
However, so far, researchers have not been able to pinpoint the source
of this dysfunction.
Using machine-learning, the researchers created a computer algorithm
that could read out the pattern of neurons firing in the Prefrontal
Cortex and reliably determine whether a subject was perceiving a cloud
of dots or remembering one they had seen before. Martinez-Trujillo hopes
that by pinpointing the specific neurons responsible for distinguishing
between reality and imagination, they might be better able to treat
disorders like schizophrenia that cause patients to confuse what’s real
and what isn’t.
“I would argue that schizophrenia is not a neurochemical disorder of
the whole brain,” said Martinez-Trujillo. “It is only a neurochemical
disorder in specific parts of the brain.”
Currently, pharmacological treatments for these disorders change the
neurochemistry in the entire brain, often causing unintended
side-effects. By targeting only the specific neurons responsible for
these disturbances, Martinez-Trujillo hopes they may be able to minimize
these side-effects.