Date: 22/01/2016 16:18:54
From: Bubblecar
ID: 834786
Subject: Human brain can hold 10 times more memories than previously believed: study

Good news for bob:

The human brain can hold 10 times more memories than previously believed, according to a new study. The key to its amazing ability lies in synapses, the neural connections responsible for storing memories.

Researchers from the Salk Institute found that each synapse can hold about 4.7 bits of information. This means that the human brain has a capacity of one petabyte, or 1,000,000,000,000,000 bytes. This is equivalent to approximately 20 million four-drawer filing cabinets filled with text.

“This is a real bombshell in the field of neuroscience…our new measurements of the brain’s memory capacity increase conservative estimates by a factor of 10 to at least a petabyte, in the same ballpark as the World Wide Web,” said Terry Sejnowski, Salk professor and co-senior author of the paper, which was published in the journal eLife.

The discovery of the human brain’s impressive capability came while the scientists were building a 3D reconstruction of rat hippocampus tissue, using it as a proxy for human brain cells.

Upon observing their creation, they noticed something unusual – but to understand the finding, one must understand the basic science of memories.

Memories and thoughts are the results of patterns of electrical and chemical activity in the brain. A vital part of that activity happens when branches of neurons intersect at certain junctions, known as synapses.

An output ‘wire’ (axon) from one neuron then connects to an input’wire’ (dendrite) of a second neuron. Signals travel across the synapse as chemicals called neurotransmitters tell the receiving neuron whether to convey an electrical signal to other neurons.

However, when the researchers reviewed the 3D reconstruction, they saw that “in some cases, a single axon from one neuron formed two synapses reaching out to a single dendrite of a second neuron, signifying that the first neuron seemed to be sending a duplicate message to the receiving neuron,” according to a Salk Institute press release.

They decided to further examine the synapses, measuring the difference similar ones.

“We were amazed to find that the difference in the sizes of the pairs of synapses were very small, on average, only about eight percent different in size. No one thought it would be such a small difference. This was a curveball from nature,” said Bartol.

The team went on to conclude that there could be about 26 categories of sizes of synapses, rather than just a few.

“Our data suggests there are 10 times more discrete sizes of synapses than previously thought,” said Bartol. It was previously believed that the brain was capable of just one to two bits for short and long-term storage in the hippocampus.

Full report: http://nation.com.pk/snippets/22-Jan-2016/bombshell-discovery-human-brain-can-hold-10-times-more-memories-than-previously-thought

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Date: 22/01/2016 18:21:19
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 834859
Subject: re: Human brain can hold 10 times more memories than previously believed: study

According to Wikipedia, the brain can only hold between 5 and 9 items in short term memory.

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Date: 22/01/2016 18:40:38
From: dv
ID: 834870
Subject: re: Human brain can hold 10 times more memories than previously believed: study

mollwollfumble said:


According to Wikipedia, the brain can only hold between 5 and 9 items in short term memory.

I wonder what they mean

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Date: 22/01/2016 18:42:17
From: Cymek
ID: 834872
Subject: re: Human brain can hold 10 times more memories than previously believed: study

dv said:


mollwollfumble said:

According to Wikipedia, the brain can only hold between 5 and 9 items in short term memory.

I wonder what they mean

Buy a carry bag

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Date: 22/01/2016 18:57:03
From: CrazyNeutrino
ID: 834881
Subject: re: Human brain can hold 10 times more memories than previously believed: study

imagine chips that have that capability

but these are interface chips, which are also needed

DARPA looks to revolutionize neural interface implants

DARPA has announced a program aimed at developing a cutting edge neural implant capable of forming a communication bridge between a human brain and electronic devices. It is hoped that technology developed under the Neural Engineering System Design program will have a wide range of applications in research and healthcare.

having an sensory interface could bring about seeing what a remote camera sees, hearing voices directly in the brain, similar thing for the other senses

but imagine downloading someone’s whole memory to a chip than being to access that chip using an interface chip to visualise and perceive memories as the other person did

an interface chip would be needed

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Date: 22/01/2016 19:02:36
From: The Rev Dodgson
ID: 834883
Subject: re: Human brain can hold 10 times more memories than previously believed: study

dv said:


mollwollfumble said:

According to Wikipedia, the brain can only hold between 5 and 9 items in short term memory.

I wonder what they mean

I suppose they mean that if you see or hear a list of unrelated items just once, most people can only remember 5 to 9 of them immediately after.

Presumably the paper is not talking about short term memory though.

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Date: 22/01/2016 19:03:51
From: CrazyNeutrino
ID: 834884
Subject: re: Human brain can hold 10 times more memories than previously believed: study

To reach one petabyte of storage

With a 3TB Hard drive, you’d need 334 of them in an array to reach one Petabyte

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Date: 22/01/2016 19:06:27
From: Postpocelipse
ID: 834885
Subject: re: Human brain can hold 10 times more memories than previously believed: study

CrazyNeutrino said:


To reach one petabyte of storage

With a 3TB Hard drive, you’d need 334 of them in an array to reach one Petabyte

That’s a crapload of movies and music

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Date: 22/01/2016 19:47:26
From: monkey skipper
ID: 834890
Subject: re: Human brain can hold 10 times more memories than previously believed: study

I thought the OP read as 10 more memories. Which is a bit different to 10 times more memories.

:-)))

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