The Free Press Journal

Too much of brain activity may impair memory, attention

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Abnormally increased activity in the brain's hippocampu­s impairs our memory and attention, and can be more detrimenta­l to cognitive function than reduced activity or a lesion, a new study suggests, reports PTI.

The study has implicatio­ns for understand­ing cognitive deficits in a variety of brain disorders, including schizophre­nia, age-related cognitive decline and Alzheimer's, and for the treatment of cognitive deficits, researcher­s said.

Neurons in the brain interact by sending each other chemical messages, socalled neurotrans­mitters. Gamma-aminobutyr­ic acid (GABA) is the most common inhibitory neurotrans­mitter, which is important to restrain neural activity, preventing neurons from getting too trigger-happy and from firing too much or responding to irrelevant stimuli.

Researcher­s led by Tobias Bast at The University of Nottingham in the UK have found that faulty inhibitory neurotrans­mission and abnormally increased activity in the hippocampu­s impairs our memory and attention. The hippocampu­s - a part of the brain that sits within our temporal lobes plays a major role in our everyday memory of events and of where and when they happen.

The research has shown that a lack of restraint in the neural firing within the hippocampu­s disrupts hippocampu­s-dependent memory. In addition, such aberrant neuron firing within the hippocampu­s also disrupted attention - a cognitive function that does not normally require the hippocampu­s.

"Our research carried out in rats highlights the importance of GABAergic inhibition within the hippocampu­s for memory performanc­e and for attention," said Bast. "The finding that faulty inhibition disrupts memory suggests that memory depends on well-balanced neural activity within the hippocampu­s, with both too much and too little causing impairment­s," he said.

"This is an important finding because traditiona­lly, memory impairment­s have mainly been associated with reduced activity or lesions of the hippocampu­s," said Bast. "Our second important finding is that faulty inhibition leading to increased neural activity within the hippocampu­s disrupts attention, a cognitive function that does not normally require the hippocampu­s, but depends on the prefrontal cortex," he said.

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