Source - http://www.guardian.co.uk/
By - Alok Jha
Category - New Orleans Extended Stay Hotel
Posted By - Homewood Suites New Orleans
By - Alok Jha
Category - New Orleans Extended Stay Hotel
Posted By - Homewood Suites New Orleans
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| New Orleans Extended Stay Hotel | 
Scientists have implanted a false memory in the brains of mice 
in an experiment that they hope will shed light on the well-documented 
phenomenon whereby people "remember" events or experiences that have 
never happened.
False memories are  a major problem with witness 
statements in courts of law. Defendants have often been convicted of 
offences based on eyewitness testimony, only to have their convictions 
later overturned when DNA or some other corroborating evidence is 
brought to bear.
In order to study how these false memories might 
form in the human brain, Susumu Tonagawa, a neuroscientist at the 
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and his team encoded memories in 
the brains of mice by manipulating individual neurons. He described the 
results of the study in the latest edition of the journal Science.
Memories
 of experiences we have had are made from several elements including 
records of objects, space and time. These records, called engrams, are 
encoded in physical and chemical changes in brain cells and the 
connections between them. According to Tonagawa, both false and genuine 
memories seem to rely on the same brain mechanisms.
In their work, Tonagawa's team used a technique known as optogenetics,
 which allows the fine control of individual brain cells. They 
engineered brain cells in the mouse hippocampus, a part of the brain 
known to be involved in forming memories, to express the gene for a 
protein called channelrhodopsin. When cells that contain 
channelrhodopsin are exposed to blue light, they become activated. The 
researchers also modified the hippocampus cells so that the 
channelrhodopsin protein would be produced in whichever brain cells the 
mouse was using to encode its memory engrams.
In the experiment, 
Tonagawa's team placed the mice in a chamber and allowed them to explore
 it. As they did so, relevant memory-encoding brain cells were producing
 the channelrhodopsin protein. The next day, the same mice were placed 
in a second chamber and given a small electric shock, to encode a fear 
response. At the same time, the researchers shone light into the mouse 
brains to activate their memories of the first chamber. That way, the 
mice learned to associate fear of the electric shock with the memory of 
the first chamber.
In the final part of the experiment, the team 
placed the mice back in the first chamber. The mice froze, demonstrating
 a typical fear response, even though they had never been shocked while 
there. "We call this 'incepting' or implanting false memories in a mouse
 brain," Tonagawa told Science.
A similar process may occur when powerful false memories are created in humans.
"Humans
 are very imaginative animals," said Tonagawa. "Independent of what is 
happening around you in the outside world, humans constantly have 
internal activity in the brain. So, just like our mouse, it is quite 
possible we can associate what we happen to have in our mind with bad or
 good high-variance ongoing events. In other words, there could be a 
false association of what you have in your mind rather than what is 
happening to you."
He added: "Our study showed that the false 
memory and the genuine memory are based on very similar, almost 
identical, brain mechanisms. It is difficult for the false memory bearer
 to distinguish between them. We hope our future findings along this 
line will further alert legislatures and legal experts how unreliable 
memory can be."
Chris French, head of the Anomalistic Psychology
 Research Unit at Goldsmiths, University of London, is a leading 
researcher in false memories in people. He said that the latest results 
were an important first step in understanding their neural basis.
"Memory
 researchers have always recognised that memory does not, as is often 
assumed, work like a video camera, faithfully recording all of the 
details of anything we experience. Instead, it is a reconstructive 
process which involves building a specific memory from fragments of real
 memory traces of the original event but also possibly including 
information from other sources."
He cautioned that the false 
memories created in the mice in the experiments were far simpler than 
the complex false memories that have generated  controversy within 
psychology and psychiatry, for example false memories of childhood 
sexual abuse, or even memories for bizarre ritualised satanic abuse, 
abduction by aliens, or "past lives".
"Such rich false memories 
will clearly involve many brain systems and we are still a long way from
 understanding the processes involved in their formation at the neuronal
 level," said Prof French.
Mark Stokes, a neuroscientist at Oxford
 University, said the experiments were a "tour de force" but that it was
 important to put them into perspective. "Although the results seem to 
imply that new memories were formed by the artificial stimulation 
(rather than the actual environment), this kind of phenomenon is still a
 long way from most people's idea of memory," he said. Rather, he said, 
it was equivalent to implanting an association that perhaps someone 
cannot place, but makes them weary of a specific environment for no 
apparent reason.
"It is unlikely that this kind of pairing could 
lead to the rich set of associations related to normal memories, 
although it is possible that over time such pairing could be integrated 
with other memories to construct a more elaborate false narrative."
The
 mouse models created by the MIT team will help scientists ask ever more
 complex questions about memories in people. "Now that we can reactivate
 and change the contents of memories in the brain, we can begin asking 
questions that were once the realm of philosophy," said Steve Ramirez, a
 colleague of Tonagawa's at MIT.
"Are there multiple conditions 
that lead to the formation of false memories? Can false memories for 
both pleasurable and aversive events be artificially created? What about
 false memories for more than just contexts – false memories for 
objects, food or other mice? These are the once seemingly sci-fi 
questions that can now be experimentally tackled in the lab."
As 
the technology develops, said French, scientists need to think about its
 uses carefully. "Whatever means are used to implant false memories, we 
need to be very aware of the ethical issues raised by such procedures - 
the potential for abuse of such techniques cannot be overstated."

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