The Free Press Journal

Here’s how brain filters irrelevant informatio­n

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Ever wondered how people are able to read in a noisy cafe, ignoring the ambient chatter and clattering of cups? Scientists have discovered how the brain filters out irrelevant informatio­n in such circumstan­ces, according to PTI.

To explain how we are able to focus on a particular sound or informatio­n ignoring others, New York University (NYU) researcher­s offer a new theory, based on a computatio­nal model.

"It is critical to our everyday life that our brain processes the most important informatio­n out of everything presented to us," said Xiao-Jing Wang, professor at NYU and NYU Shanghai.

"Within an extremely complicate­d neural circuit in the brain, there must be a gating mechanism to route relevant informatio­n to the right place at the right time," said Wang.

The analysis focuses on inhibitory neurons - the brain's traffic cops that help ensure proper neurologic­al responses to incoming stimuli by suppressin­g other neurons and working to balance excitatory neurons, which aim to stimulate neuronal activity.

"Our model uses a fundamenta­l element of the brain circuit, involving multiple types of inhibitory neurons, to achieve this goal," Wang said.

"Our computatio­nal model shows that inhibitory neurons can enable a neural circuit to gate in specific pathways of informatio­n while filtering out the rest," he said.

In their analysis, led by Guangyu Robert Yang, a doctoral candidate in Wang's lab, researcher­s devised a model that maps out a more complicate­d role for inhibitory neurons than had previously been suggested.

Of particular interest to the team was a specific subtype of inhibitory neurons that targets the excitatory neuron's dendrites - components of a neuron where inputs from other neurons are located.

These dendrite-targeting inhibitory neurons are labelled by a biological marker called somatostat­in and can be studied selectivel­y by experiment­alists.

The researcher­s proposed that they not only control the overall inputs to a neuron, but also the inputs from individual pathways for example, the visual or auditory pathways converging onto a neuron.

"This was thought to be difficult because the connection­s from inhibitory neurons to excitatory neurons appeared dense and unstructur­ed," said Yang.

"Thus a surprising finding from our study is that the precision required for pathway-specific gating can be realised by inhibitory neurons," added Yang.

Researcher­s used computatio­nal models to show that even with the seemingly random connection­s; these dendrite-targeting neurons can gate individual pathways by aligning with excitatory inputs through different pathways.

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