Study
suggests animals dream
www.chinaview.cn
2006-12-20 13:48:34
BEIJING,
Dec. 20 (Xinhuanet) -- When rats snuggle up for a nap, they replay "movies"
of their daily activities in what scientists suggest is the animal equivalent
of dreaming, a new study suggests.
The research supports the idea that memories are cemented into the brain during
sleep.
"This
work brings us closer to an understanding of the nature of animal dreams and gives
us important clues as to the role of sleep in processing memories of our past
experiences," said co-researcher Matthew Wilson at the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology (MIT).
In a past study, Wilson measured activity in rats' hippocampuses, the brain's
memory center, while awake and sleeping. He found that rats did form memories
of events they experienced while awake, and that the rodents replayed the memories
while snoozing. But whether the rats replayed actual images was unknown.
In human dreams, vivid images typically weave together to form a memory movie.
To find out if rats replay visuals, Wilson and Daoyun Ji, also of MIT, measured
brain activity in the hippocampus and visual cortex while rats ran through mazes
with different designs on the floors and walls. The brain regions showed specific
patterns as the animals sensed their surroundings in the maze.
Also, the scientists recorded activity of individual neurons in the rats' brains
while the animals were awake and asleep. They found that the same neurons spiked
during wakeful play got reactivated during sleep.
From this the scientists infer that during sleep, neurons in the visual region
"talk" to those in the hippocampus in a sort of "conversation,"
suggesting that rat naps help consolidate daily experiences and make these memories
stick.
For the first time, this work shows that the brain is replaying memory events
in two locations at once, in the visual and memory centers. (Agencies)