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[week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D...

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[week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST
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Page 1: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.

[week 1 Introduction]

How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain?

Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.DDepartment of Bio and Brain Engineering,

KAIST

Page 2: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.

What is going to happen next?

Page 3: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.
Page 4: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.

The marshmallow experimenton deferred gratification

• This study was conducted in 1972 by psychologist Walter Mischel of Stanford University.

• A marshmallow was offered to each child. If the child could resist eating the marshmallow for 15 mins, he was promised two instead of one.

• The scientists analyzed how long each child resisted the temptation of eating the marshmallow, and whether or not doing so was correlated with future success.

Page 5: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.
Page 6: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.

Follow-up studies of Marshmallow test

• Mischel discovered there existed an unexpected correla-tion between the results of the marshmallow test, and the success of the children many years later.

• The first follow-up study, in 1988, showed that "preschool children who delayed gratification longer in the self-im-posed delay paradigm, were described more than 10 years later by their parents as adolescents who were signifi-cantly more competent".

• A second follow-up study, in 1990, showed that the ability to delay gratification also correlated with higher SAT scores.

Page 7: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.

• Failed children: low academic performance. SAT scores are 210 lower than students of success.Big difference in annual income in 30 years

Page 8: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.

Brain: The most complex system in the universe

Page 9: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.
Page 10: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.
Page 11: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.
Page 12: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.

How do we explain Marshmallow test results based on brain func-

tions

• A 2011 study indicates that the characteristic in Marsh-mallow test remains with the person for life.

• Additionally, brain imaging showed key differences be-tween the two groups in two areas: the prefrontal cortex (more active in high delayers) and the ventral striatum in Basal Ganglia (an area linked to addictions).

[BJ Casey et al., (August 29, 2011). "From the Cover: Be-havioral and neural correlates of delay of gratification 40 years later". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sci-ences 108 (36): 14998–15003.]

Page 13: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.
Page 14: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.

What are the differences in behaviors during the experiment

between two groups of children?

Page 15: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.
Page 16: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.
Page 17: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.

Ability of self-control

• Teaching children to pretend that a marshmallow was only a picture helped them resist the treat for much longer.

• “If they imagine a picture, they can wait as if it were a picture.”

• ‘Perception’ is really important for self-control.

Page 18: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.
Page 19: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.

What is going to happen next?

Page 20: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.

SHOP experiment by Brian Knutson et al.

• Knutson and his team have been putting subjects in-side a magnetic resonance imaging scanner.

• This technique is called functional MRI, and it's about watching the brain in action. In an important paper published last year in Neuron, Knutson's team identi-fied by fMRI what he called a “hedonic competition between the immediate pleasure of acquisition and an equally immediate pain of paying.”

Page 21: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.

Where are more oxygen deliveredin the brain,

activated regionsor

non-activated regions?

Page 22: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.
Page 23: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.

The scanner works by measuring the blood oxygen level dependent (or BOLD) signal. When we think, pon-der, evaluate, giddily anticipate or even fret, oxygen-carrying blood flows to particular brain regions doing

the work.

Page 24: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.

SHOP experiment by Brian Knutson (2007)

Page 25: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.

The experiment of SHOP

• Subjects were rolled inside the scanner, where they could see a small video screen that dis-played products available for purchase—DVDs, books, games, small electronic devices.

• After a short interval, the price of the product was displayed, and subjects could choose whether to make a purchase.

• The scanner was activated during three distinct times: product presentation, price display and de-cision.

Page 26: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.

SHOP experiment by Brian Knutson (2007)

Page 27: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.

Outcomes of SHOP experiment

• When the subjects thought about whether they wanted the prod-uct, the scanner showed that blood flow was increased to an area called the nucleus accumbens (NAcc), an area of the brain par-ticularly receptive to dopamine, a chemical that promotes desire.

• When the subject was evaluating the price, the medial prefrontal cortex (MPFC) became active; that's where humans tend to process value judgments, goals and other “executive function” information.

• In addition, greater activity in an area called the insula, a region associated with unpleasant emotions and the anticipation of loss, was seen in the brains of subjects who decided not to make a purchase.

Page 28: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.

Era of Mind-reading Technol-ogy

Page 29: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.
Page 30: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.

Complex spatiotemporal dynamics in the Brain

Page 31: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.

Brain is an information processor

iuij

Spike reception: EPSP, summation of EPSPs

Spike reception: EPSP

Threshold Spike emission (Action potential)

threshold -> Spike

Page 32: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.
Page 33: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.

EEG recordings

Page 34: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.

Neuronal Oscillations

• infra-slow: 0.02-0.1 Hz, • slow: 0.1-15 Hz (during slow-wave sleep or anesthesia)– Slow oscillation (0.2-1 Hz), – Delta (1-4 Hz), – Spindle (7-15Hz), – Theta (generated in the limbic system)

• fast: 20-60 Hz, • ultra-fast: 100-600 Hz.

Page 35: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.
Page 36: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.
Page 37: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.
Page 38: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.
Page 39: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.

Complex rhythms and oscillations in the brain

Page 40: [week 1 Introduction] How we understand ‘human mind’ from the brain? Jaeseung Jeong, Ph.D Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, KAIST.

Important issues in this lecture

• What is the marshmallow test? What are the difference between the children of success and failure for their atti-tudes and behaviors? What is the interpretation (and implications) of the results in terms of neurobiology?

• What is the SHOP experiment of Knutson group? What are the implications of the results in this study?

• What are the principles of fMRI and EEG: how to measure brain activations using these techniques. What are the advantages of the EEG over other neuroimaging meth-ods?


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