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British Council Science
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Bach is Back
Conserving Coral
Robot Detector
Catching the Virus
Engineering and Push-Ups
Networked Telescopes
Breathing Pictures
Recording Memory
Small size, big sound
Virtual Cocoon
Avoiding Mass Extinctions Engine
Smart house helps dementia sufferers
The Biggest Telescope in Space
‘We Recommend This …’
‘Audioblogging’
The Jumping Robot
New help for Depression
Hydrogen Located on Moon
Dinosaur teeth tell evolutionary story
2.7 Billion Year Old Discovery
Gorilla Talk Reveals New Insight
Eco Housing Experiment
Music and Endurance
Mini Robots
Cloud Radar
Smart Green Meter
New conservation
Электронная бумага
'I believe in yesterday'
Биостекло, заживляющее кости
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Растения пустыни
Показания по уголовному делу
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Интерактивный Прямой Эфир
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Сухая стиральная машина
Саморемонтирующийся самолет
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Дружески-настроенное программное обеспечение
Сферическое телевидение
Автобус без водителя
ВИРТУАЛЬНЫЙ ЛОНДОН
Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging
For more information on the Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging at University College London
Alzheimer’s Research Trust
For more information on Alzheimer’s research
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Recording Memory

‘Mind-reading’
‘This “mind-reading” experiment, is quite a sensationalist term,’ says Dr Demis Hassabis reflecting on the media response to a recent experiment, ‘but it’s not entirely incorrect either.’ Hassabis is one of a group of Wellcome Trust researchers based at University College London, who have been looking at how memory is stored in the brain. ‘I am interested in auto-biographical memory, events in our lives, what makes us who we are,’ says Hassabis. ‘That is the type of memory that goes first in Amnesia, in Alzheimer’s, it’s the most vulnerable because it is also the most complex memory.’  The team is looking for what is encoded by memory when people experience something, and are exploring the hippocampus, the part of the brain critical for memory.

Scanned Image © Demis Hassabis, Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging, UCL

Higher-level thinking
‘People have done experiments,’ says Hassabis, ‘where they have shown participants pictures of cars and people, and they worked out from their brain activity what they were looking at.’ What they haven’t been able to identify is higher-level thinking, such as spatial memory. Before he completed his Doctorate, Hassabis was a well-known computer games developer, and he brought this expertise to this project.

‘We basically created an experiment with a virtual reality environment,’ says Hassabis, ‘which people navigated around, like playing Quake. The only task you had to do is walk from A to B to C to D, four pre-described positions in a green room and a blue room.’ When participants reached the assigned point they pressed a button, eyes down to the floor so they weren’t registering any image in particular, while brain activity was being scanned the whole time.

Spatial memory
‘We showed,’ explains Hassabis, ‘that just from activity in the hippocampus, we can predict where somebody was standing in the room. We are in some sense looking at the internal representation of space in the person’s brain. The only difference in each position is the person’s internal map of where they are. We were the first to show a high-level thought, a high-level memory, and investigate the nature of that in the human brain.’ The key says Hassabis, is that if you know what makes something memorable, you could develop a therapy to, ‘emphasize those aspects that we know are good for something being memorable.’

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