It
may not feel like it, but our eyes are constantly making rapid, tiny movements
called saccades,
taking in new information as we focus our gaze on various things in the world.
As we do so, our brains receive the input – and depending on what the object of
our gaze is, it turns out the brain activity triggered can be quite unique.
"While
we typically do not perceive our own eye movements, the abrupt change in visual
input with each saccade has substantial consequences at the neuronal
level," researchers explain in a new study led
by first author and cognitive neuroscientist Tobias Staudiglfrom Ludwig Maximilian
University of Munich in Germany.
In an
experiment, Staudigl and fellow researchers worked with 13 epilepsy patients,
who had electrodes implanted in their brains to monitor their condition. This
kind of intervention can be helpful for brain scientists, so they often turn to
such patients with electrodes already implanted, in case they'd be willing to
volunteer their time.
Thus,
the patients consented to take part in a study in which they were instructed to
freely view a range of visual stimuli displayed on a screen, including images
of human faces, monkey faces, and also non-face imagery (pictures of flowers,
fruit, cars, and so on).
While they were doing this, a camera-based eye-tracking system monitored what objects their eyes were looking at, and the electrodes simultaneously monitored neural activity in the amygdala and the hippocampus – distinct parts of the brain that are both involved with different aspects of processing memories, amongst other functions, with the amygdala also important for regulating our emotions.
When
the participants looked at human faces, neurons fired and synchronized between
the amygdala and the hippocampus in a specific pattern that was different to
the results from the other stimuli – which the team interprets as evidence of
how the brain handles memory encoding for important social information,
distinct from other non-social objects.
"You
could easily argue that faces are one of the most important objects we look
at," says senior
author of the study, Ueli Rutishauser, the director of the neuroscience
research at nonprofit healthcare and research organization Cedars-Sinai in Los
Angeles.
"We
make a lot of highly significant decisions based on looking at faces, including
whether we trust somebody, whether the other person is happy or angry, or
whether we have seen this person before."
The
foundations for those decisions have to start somewhere, and the researchers
say the process can be seen beginning in the rapid adjustments of saccadic eye
movements.
It's
long been known that seeing faces makes neurons fire in the amygdala more
so than for other forms of stimuli, although the reasons for this have remained
uncertain.
"One
hypothesis is that these signals are transferred from the amygdala via strong
projections to the hippocampus, where they elevate and prioritize hippocampal
processing of stimuli with high social and emotional significance," the researchers write.
"This
may serve hippocampal memory encoding for salient stimuli and events."
That
could be what we're seeing here, with the researchers noting that the
proportion of cells that were visually selective for human faces was
substantially larger in the amygdala than in the hippocampus, suggesting that
the amygdala plays a more important frontline role in identifying social
stimuli in the first instance.
"We
think that this is a reflection of the amygdala preparing the hippocampus to
receive new socially relevant information that will be important to
remember," Rutishauser says.
Another
key finding was that long-distance communication between different parts of the
brain was increased when social stimuli were present.
"When
a fixation on a human face followed a saccade, neural communication between the
amygdala and hippocampus was enhanced," the researchers write.
"The same effect was not observed for saccades and fixations that landed
on other stimuli."
However,
when the participants looked at human faces they had already seen earlier in
the experiment, the neuron-firing pattern in the amygdala appeared more slowly
– suggesting learned and familiar faces don't spark the same level of neural
excitement as new social stimuli.
The findings are reported in ScienceAlert.com
I've just seen a face
ReplyDeleteI can't forget the time or place
Where we just met
She's just the girl for me
And I want all the world to see
We've met, mm-mm-mm-m'mm-mm
Had it been another day
I might have looked the other way
And I'd have never been aware
But as it is I'll dream of her
Tonight, di-di-di-di'n'di
Fallin', yes, I am fallin'
And she keeps callin'
Me back again
I have never known
The like of this, I've been alone
And I have missed things
And kept out of sight
But other girls were never quite
Like this, di-di-di-di'n'di
Fallin', yes, I am fallin'
And she keeps callin'
Me back again
Fallin', yes, I am fallin'
And she keeps callin'
Me back again
I've just seen a face
I can't forget the time or place
Where we just met
She's just the girl for me
And I want all the world to see
We've met, mm-mm-mm-di-di-di
Fallin', yes, I am fallin'
And she keeps callin'
Me back again
Fallin', yes, I am fallin'
And she keeps callin'
Me back again
Oh, fallin', yes, I am fallin'
And she keeps callin'
Me back again
Songwriters: John Lennon / Paul McCartney
One glimpse of one face changes the direction of the future.
ReplyDeleteYou didn't fully realize that, but now you do.
Very few of us are fortunate enough to know that. I thank my eyes, my amygdala and hippocampus, and especially my own wife.