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Science
Related: About this forumAfter distractions, rotating brain waves may help thought circle back to the task
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2025-10-distractions-rotating-brain-thought-circle.htmlMassachusetts Institute of Technology
Seemed a bit fantastical to me at first but the explanations make sense (to this non-scientist.)
As sure as the brain is prone to distraction, it can also return its focus to the task at hand. A new study in animals by scientists at the Picower Institute for Learning and Memory of MIT shows how that seems to happen: Coordinated neural activity in the form of a rotating brain wave puts thought back on track.
. . .
Mathematical 'rotations'
In the study, animals were given a visual working memory task, but sometimes they experienced one of two different kinds of distractions while they tried to remember an object they saw. As one would expect, the distractions affected the animals' performance on the tasksometimes causing them to make mistakes or at least slowing down their reaction time when the task called on them to act. The researchers, meanwhile, kept tabs on the electrical activity of a sampling of hundreds of neurons in the prefrontal cortex, a brain region responsible for higher-level cognition.
To analyze how the neural activity varied as the animals performed the task over hundreds of sessionswith or without either of the distractions and in cases where the animals performed well or not so wellthe researchers employed a mathematical measure and visualization that measures their degree of coordination over time called "subspace coding." Subspace coding shows that the activity of cortical neurons is highly coordinated.
"Like starlings murmuring in the sky," Miller said.
. . .
. . .
Mathematical 'rotations'
In the study, animals were given a visual working memory task, but sometimes they experienced one of two different kinds of distractions while they tried to remember an object they saw. As one would expect, the distractions affected the animals' performance on the tasksometimes causing them to make mistakes or at least slowing down their reaction time when the task called on them to act. The researchers, meanwhile, kept tabs on the electrical activity of a sampling of hundreds of neurons in the prefrontal cortex, a brain region responsible for higher-level cognition.
To analyze how the neural activity varied as the animals performed the task over hundreds of sessionswith or without either of the distractions and in cases where the animals performed well or not so wellthe researchers employed a mathematical measure and visualization that measures their degree of coordination over time called "subspace coding." Subspace coding shows that the activity of cortical neurons is highly coordinated.
"Like starlings murmuring in the sky," Miller said.
. . .
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After distractions, rotating brain waves may help thought circle back to the task (Original Post)
erronis
Yesterday
OP
Ocelot II
(128,036 posts)1. At first I misread the thread title, saw the words "rotting brain waves"
and figured it would be about Trump.
erronis
(21,795 posts)2. I'll take that for 100, Alex. When that mass between his ears stops dribbling out of his mouth.
WestMichRad
(2,741 posts)3. So what's happening when...
with aging, when I get distracted, it seems increasingly difficult to remember what the heck I was doing before the distraction? Sometimes feels like Im bouncing along at random. Then much later, Ill remember what I was doing. Just a longer frequency of rotation? Or senility setting in?
Ive learned to roll with it, but sometimes it feels like entropy of the brain.
erronis
(21,795 posts)4. Good question. For most of us.
If this theory is correct than it would seem that our corrective flows might be slower as we age.
I wonder if it is correlated with how physically active we are - how much our cerebral blood flows are maintained (or diminished.)
(Love being an armchair wannabe scientist.)