Eureka! Neural evidence for sudden insight

May 12, 2010
Brain

A recent study provides intriguing information about the neural dynamics underlying behavioral changes associated with the development of new problem solving strategies. The research, published by the Cell Press in the May 13 issue of the journal Neuron, supports the idea of "a-ha" moments in the brain that are associated with sudden insight.

Our daily lives are filled with changes that force us to abandon old behavioral strategies that are no longer advantageous and develop new, more appropriate responses. While it is clear that new rules are often deduced through trial-and-error learning, the neural dynamics that underlie the change from a familiar to a novel rule are not well understood.

"The ability of animals and humans to infer and apply new rules in order to maximize reward relies critically on the frontal lobes," explains one of the researchers who led the study, Dr. Jeremy K. Seamans from the Research Centre at the University of British Columbia (UBC) and Vancouver Coastal Health Research Institute. "In our study, we examined how groups of frontal cortex neurons in rat brains switch from encoding a familiar rule to a completely novel rule that could only be deduced through trial and error."

Specifically, Dr. Seamans with colleagues from UBC and collaborator Dr. Daniel Durstewitz from the Central Institute of Mental Health in Germany were interested in determining whether networks of neurons change their activity in a slow gradual way as an old strategy is abandoned and a new one is learned or whether there is a more abrupt transition.

Using sophisticated statistical techniques to study ensembles of neurons in the medial frontal cortex on a trial-by-trial basis as rats deduced a novel rule in a specially designed task, they found that the same populations of neurons formed unique network states that corresponded to familiar and novel rules. Interestingly, although it took many trials for the animals to figure out the new rule, the recorded ensembles did not change gradually but instead exhibited a rather abrupt transition to a new pattern that corresponded directly to the shift in behavior, as if the network had experienced an "a-ha" moment.

Taken together, these findings provide concrete support for sudden transitions between neural states rather than slow, gradual changes. "In the present problem solving context where the animal had to infer a new rule by accumulating evidence through trial and error, such sudden neural and behavioral transitions may correspond to moments of 'sudden insight,'" concludes Dr. Durstewitz.

Explore further: For combat veterans suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, 'fear circuitry' in the brain never rests

More information: Seamans et al.: “Abrupt Transitions between Prefrontal Neural Ensemble States Accompany Behavioral Transitions during Rule Learning.” Publishing in Neuron 66, 438-448, May 13, 2010. DOI:10.1016/j.neuron.2010.03.029

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Alizee
1 / 5 (1) May 12, 2010
Dense aether theory compares the eureka! moment to the rogue waves at the oceans. Solitons inside of human brain are circulating through neural net rather randomly, but at the rare moment, where they collide/interfere at the same place (moment of high frequency of spikes), they overload neural synapse, through which the another spikes are spreading more preferably like through shortcurt at terminal board box (in Hebbian theory of synaptic plasticity the "cells that fire together, wire together").

During sleeping this neuron becomes more conductive permanently by attaching another synapses around it, thus forming the preferred path for spreading of soliton spikes in future as an element of long-term memory.

The soliton character of spike spreading is supported by 1D-foamy interior of neurons, like at the case of modern hollow-core optical cables. Maybe the artificial W.I.K.I brain from famous I, robot movie isn't the matter of so distant future.
Eric_B
not rated yet May 12, 2010
Is this a case of too much L.S.D. or not enough?
neiorah
not rated yet May 12, 2010
Maybe the ah ha moment is when the neural pathway becomes complete.
puyraud_christelle
not rated yet May 13, 2010
WOW !!!!

Is it the explanation of a method of training that I discovered, that I experiment on myself and share on the internet since several years, that is Eureka Method ?!!

Perhaps, today, I will have the answers to the questions that I had since all those years !!!!
Truth
not rated yet May 13, 2010
Alizee: your comment is most intriguing. May I ask you how microtubules might play a role in this function? And are you referring to quantum phenomena?

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