In this engaging discussion, Prof. Mark Humphries, Chair in Computational Neuroscience at the University of Nottingham, unpacks the fascinating world of neural spikes. He explores how neurons communicate, the surprising concept of 'dark neurons,' and why many spikes fail to reach their destination. The conversation touches on the balance of excitatory and inhibitory inputs in the brain, the evolution of neuroscience technology, and how our brain processes visual information. Humphries also emphasizes the importance of accessible science communication.
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insights INSIGHT
Neurons Use Voltage Spikes
Neurons send messages via rapid voltage spikes, not through slow chemistry alone.
Spikes allow fast, long-distance, and precise communication in the brain.
insights INSIGHT
Why Spikes Beat Chemistry
Spikes are energy-expensive but transmit signals quickly and accurately over long distances.
Chemical signals are slower, diffuse easily, and are unreliable over long distances.
insights INSIGHT
Massive Connectivity of Neurons
A single cortical neuron can connect to around 8,000-10,000 other neurons.
This architecture enables broad local and interregional communication.
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Neurons are the fundamental building blocks of the brain. In the human brain, billions of these neurons communicate and liaise with one another using spikes, blips of electric voltages. Studying and understanding how these spikes emerge in the brain, how they travel through the brain and how this communication leads to meaningful actions are part of the cutting edge research in the field of neuroscience. In this episode of Bridging the Gaps I speak with professor Mark Humphries and discuss the research that he presents in his new book “The Spike: An Epic Journey Through The Brain in 2.1 Seconds”. This is a deeply informative account of the journey that these electrical signals take as they move from one neuron to another and eventually lead us to act. The tackles previously unanswered mysteries: Why are most neurons silent? What causes neurons to fire spikes spontaneously, without input from other neurons or the outside world? Why do most spikes fail to reach any destination? In this thorough discussion with professor Mark Humphries, we touch upon these fascinating questions and intriguing concepts.
Mark Humphries is Chair in Computational Neuroscience at the University of Nottingham. He is the founding editor of “the Spike” an online publication available at Medium dot com.
I begin our conversation by asking Mark about the structure of an individual neuron and how spikes emerge in a single neuron. We then discuss the concept of Dark Neuron and talk about the spikes that don’t lead to new spikes and just fail. A very interesting question is what do these spikes mean and how do these spikes carry messages from one point in the brain to another. In the book, Mark reports two groups of researchers holding two different viewpoints, these are “The Timers” and “The Counters”. I ask Mark “who are the timers” and “who are the counters” and what are their viewpoints on the question that how these spikes carry messages from one point in the nervous system to another. And finally we discuss how research is conducted in the fields of neuroscience and computational neuroscience. We particularly discuss progress that the researchers are making in the field of computing neuroscience.
For more in-depth discussions with researchers and thought leaders, reach us at:
https://www.bridgingthegaps.ie/
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Complement this podcast with the fascinating discussion with Professor Daniel Schacter on “Seven Sins of Memory” available at: www.bridgingthegaps.ie/2015/01/on-th…iel-schacter/
And then listen to Professor David Badre “On Task: How Our Brain Gets Things Done” available at: https://www.bridgingthegaps.ie/2021/02/on-task-how-our-brain-gets-things-done-with-professor-david-badre/