Home > Lifestyle > Report

New brain connections form rapidly during motor learning

ANI
Monday, November 30, 2009 15:03 IST
Email Email
Print Print
Share Share

London: A new study conducted on mice has shown that new connections begin to form between brain cells almost immediately as they learn a new task.

The research team from the University of California, Santa Cruz said that these findings might help understand rewiring processes that take place in the brain during motor learning.

They studied mice as they were trained to reach through a slot to get a seed.

The researchers found that learning a new task led to the growth of structures that form connections called synapses, between nerve cells in the motor cortex, the area involved in controlling muscle movements.

"We found very quick and robust synapse formation almost immediately, within one hour of the start of training," Nature magazine quoted Yi Zuo, assistant professor of molecular, cell and developmental biology at UCSC as saying.

They also found that dendritic spines form synapses with other nerve cells, where pyramidal neurons receive input from other brain regions involved in motor memories and muscle movements.

"Motor learning makes a permanent mark in the brain. When you learn to ride a bicycle, once the motor memory is formed, you don't forget. The same is true when a mouse learns a new motor skill; the animal learns how to do it and never forgets," Zuo added.

Double click an English word for Macmillan Dictionary definition
digg reddit google Facebook MySpace delicious

Going platinum
The preview of Sakti Burman's show of serigraphs was hosted by art collector Lavesh Jagasia on Monday at the Pundole Art Gallery
Girls wanna have fun
Wine connoisseur Shamita Singha hosted a wine appreciation dinner for some of her friends as she took them through a number of wines paired with a four-course meal.

Get daily news in your inbox and read it at your convenience.

D 910