For everyone who’s looked into an infant’s
sparkling eyes and wondered what goes on in its little fuzzy head, there’s now
an answer. New research shows that babies display glimmers of consciousness and
memory as early as 5 months old.
For decades, neuroscientists have been
searching for an unmistakable signal of consciousness in electrical brain
activity. Such a sign could determine whether minimally conscious or
anesthetized adults are aware—and when consciousness begins in babies.
Studies on adults show a particular pattern
of brain activity: When your senses detect something, such as a moving object,
the vision center of your brain activates, even if the object goes by too fast
for you to notice. But if the object remains in your visual field for long
enough, the signal travels from the back of the brain to the prefrontal cortex,
which holds the image in your mind long enough for you to notice. Scientists see
a spike in brain activity when the senses pick something up, and another
signal, the “late slow wave,” when the prefrontal cortex gets the message. The
whole process takes less than one-third of a second.
Researchers in France wondered if such a
two-step pattern might be present in infants. The team monitored infants’ brain
activity through caps fitted with electrodes. More than 240 babies
participated, but two-thirds were too squirmy for the movement-sensitive caps.
The remaining 80 (ages 5 months, 12 months, or 15 months) were shown a picture
of a face on a screen for a fraction of a second.
Cognitive neuroscientist Sid Kouider of
CNRS, the French national research agency, in Paris watched for swings in
electrical activity, called event-related potentials (ERPs), in the babies’
brains. In babies who were at least 1 year old, Kouider saw an ERP pattern
similar to an adult’s, but it was about three times slower. The team was
surprised to see that the 5-month-olds also showed a late slow wave, although it
was weaker and more drawn out than in the older babies. Kouider speculates that
the late slow wave may be present in babies as young as 2 months.
This late slow wave may indicate conscious
thought, Kouider and colleagues report online today in Science. The wave,
feedback from the prefrontal cortex, suggests that the image is stored briefly
in the baby’s temporary “working memory.” And consciousness, Kouider says, is
composed of working memory.
The team displayed remarkable patience to
gather data from infants, says cognitive neuroscientist Lawrence Ward of the
University of British Columbia, Vancouver, in Canada, who was not involved in
the study. However, the work, although well executed, is not the last word, he
says. “I expect we’ll find several different neural activity patterns to be
correlated with consciousness.”
Comparing infant brain waves to adult
patterns is tricky, says Charles Nelson, a neuropsychologist at Harvard Medical
School in Boston. “ERP components change dramatically over the first few years
of life,” he writes in an e-mail. “I would be reluctant to attribute the same
mental operation (i.e., consciousness) in infants as in adults simply because
of similar patterns of brain activity.”
“He’s right, the ERP components are not exactly the same as in
adults,” Kouider responds, but the ERP signature he saw had the same
characteristics.
Kouider next hopes to explore how these
signals of consciousness connect to learning, especially language development.
“We make the assumption that babies are learning very quickly and that they’re
fully unconscious of what they learn,” Kouider says. “Maybe that’s not true.”
(via:wired)
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