For the first
time, neuroscientists were able to find out how different thoughts are
reflected in neuronal activity during natural conversations. Johanna
Derix, Olga Iljina and the interdisciplinary team of Dr. Tonio Ball from
the Cluster of Excellence BrainLinks-BrainTools at the University of
Freiburg and the Epilepsy Center of the University Medical Center
Freiburg (Freiburg, Germany) report on the link between speech, thoughts
and brain responses in a special issue of Frontiers in Human Neuroscience.
"Thoughts
are difficult to investigate, as one cannot observe in a direct manner
what the person is thinking about. Language, however, reflects the
underlying mental processes, so we can perform linguistic analyses of
the subjects' speech and use such information as a "bridge" between the
neuronal processes and the subject's thoughts," explains neuroscientist
Johanna Derix..
The novelty of the authors' approach is that the
participants were not instructed to think and talk about a given topic
in an experimental setting. Instead, the researchers analysed everyday
conversations and the underlying brain activity, which was recorded
directly from the cortical surface. This study was possible owing to the
help of epilepsy patients in whom recordings of neural activity had to
be obtained over several days for the purpose of pre-neurosurgical
diagnostics.
For a start, borders between individual thoughts in
continuous conversations had to be identified. Earlier psycholinguistic
research indicates that a simple sentence is a suitable unit to contain a
single thought, so the researchers opted for linguistic segmentation
into simple sentences. The resulting "idea" units were classified into
different categories. These included, for example, whether or not a
sentence expressed memory- or self-related content. Then, the
researchers analysed content-specific neural responses and observed
clearly visible patterns of brain activity.
Thus, the
neuroscientists from Freiburg have demonstrated the feasibility of their
innovative approach to investigate, via speech, how the human brain
processes thoughts during real-life conditions.
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