首页
登录
职称英语
Scientists have long believed that constructing memories is like playing with
Scientists have long believed that constructing memories is like playing with
游客
2023-12-12
68
管理
问题
Scientists have long believed that constructing memories is like playing with neurological toys. Exposed to a barrage of sensations from the outside world, we connect together brain cells to form new patterns of electrical connections that stand for images, smells, touches and sounds.
The most unshakable part of this belief is that the neurons used to build these memory circuits are depletable resource, like petroleum or gold. We are each given a finite number of cells, and the supply gets smaller each year. That is certainly how it feels as memories blur with middle age and it gets harder and harder to learn new things. Maybe it’s time for this notion to be forgotten-or at least radically revised.
In the past two years, a series of confusing experiments has forced scientific researchers to rethink this and other assumptions about how memory works. The perplexing results of these experiments remind scientists how much they have to learn about one of the last great mysteries-how the brain keeps a record of our individual passage through life, allowing us to carry the past inside our head.
This much seems clear: the traces of memory-or engrams as neuroscientists call them-are first forged deep inside the brain in an area called the hippocampus. This area stores the engrams temporarily until they are transferred somehow (perhaps during sleep) to permanent storage sites throughout the cerebral cortex. This area, located behind the forehead, is often described as the center of intelligence and perception. Here, as in the hippocampus, the information is thought to reside in the form of neurological scribbles, clusters of connected cells.
Until now our old view of brain functionality has been that these patterns ate constructed from the supply of neurons that have been in place since birth. New memories don’t require new neurons-just new ways of connecting the old ones together. Retrieving a memory is a matter of activating one of these circuits, coaxing the original stimulus back to life.
The picture appears very sensible. The billions of neurons in a single brain can be arranged in countless combinations, providing more than enough clusters to record even the richest life. If adult brains were cranking out new neurons as easily ad skin and bone from new cells, it would serve only to scramble memory’s delicate ornamental pattern.
Studies with adult monkeys in the mid-1960s seemed to support the belief that the supply of neurons is fixed at birth. Therefore the surprise when Elizabeth Gould and Charles Gross of Princeton University reported last year that the monkeys they studied seemed to be producing thousands of new neurons a day in the hippocampus of their brain. Even more surprising, Gould and Gross found evidence that a steady stream of the fresh cells may be continually moving to the cerebral cortex.
No one is quite sure what to make of these findings. There had already been hints that spawning of brain cells, a process called neurogenesis, occurs in animals with more primitive nervous systems. For years, Fernando Nottebohm of Rockefeller University has been showing that canaries create a new batch of neurons every time they learn a song, then slough them off when it’s time to change tunes.
But it was widely assumed that in mammals and especially primates this manufacture of new brain parts had long ago been phased out by evolution. With a greater need to store memories for a long time, these creatures would need to ensure that the engrams weren’t disrupted by interloping new cells. [br] What did the experiments of Gould and Gross and Fernando show according to the passage?
选项
A、The old notion of memory is wrong.
B、The results of these experiments support the old view of neurons.
C、Animals have lost the ability to manufacture new brain parts.
D、The new brain cells will disrupt engrams.
答案
B
解析
此题为细节题。答案在第七段一句话,“…seemed to support the belief that the supply of neurons…”,也就是Gould and Gross and Fernando通过实验来证实了old view of neurons这个belief。所以最佳答案为B。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3267816.html
相关试题推荐
Whentheendoftheworldcomes,we’llknowwhattoblame.Scientistshavefou
Whentheendoftheworldcomes,we’llknowwhattoblame.Scientistshavefou
Itisthenewsthatallslothshavebeenwaitingfor.ScientistsinGermanyha
Itisthenewsthatallslothshavebeenwaitingfor.ScientistsinGermanyha
In17th-centuryNewEngland,almosteveryonebelievedinwitches.Strugglingt
In17th-centuryNewEngland,almosteveryonebelievedinwitches.Strugglingt
In17th-centuryNewEngland,almosteveryonebelievedinwitches.Strugglingt
[originaltext]Atonetime,scientiststhoughtthespacebetweenEarthandSun
[originaltext]Atonetime,scientiststhoughtthespacebetweenEarthandSun
Theyaresuperstitionsattachedtonumbers;eventhoseancientGreeksbelieved
随机试题
[originaltext]TheNationalCenterforEducationStatisticsdiditslatestre
AreFamiliesNecessary?Ashumanchildrenareunusual
ThefamilyisthecenterofmosttraditionalAsians’lives.Manypeopleworr
SmotherLove[A]Everymorning,LeanneBricklandandhersisterwouldbic
为确保机动车在高速公路行驶的安全,不得有下列哪些行为?()A.倒车逆行,穿越中
在进行子系统结构设计时,需要确定划分后的子系统模块结构,并画出模块结构图。该过程
咽及食管闭合性损伤可出现()A.吞咽痛、吐血、呕血、皮下气肿、颈部可
患儿,男,9岁,读小学3年级,因学习成绩差而来就诊。上课时坐立不安,动作过多,如
基金管理人、基金托管人和其他基金信息披露义务人应当依法披露基金信息,公开披露的基
下列哪一行为应以玩忽职守罪论处?()A.法官执行判决时严重不负责任,因未履行法
最新回复
(
0
)