A game based on Simon shows how people mentally rehearse new information

Thursday, May 7, 2020 - 06:10 in Psychology & Sociology

A brain at rest isn’t always resting. Sometimes it’s rehearsing information it just learned. For the first time, scientists have watched this mental replay in two human volunteers. These neural ruminations, described May 5 in Cell Reports, might play a role in making a new, fragile memory more durable, scientists suspect. Most examples of mental replay, in which nerve cells fire off signals in a sequence that matches that of the original learning, come from animals other than humans (SN: 10/3/19). But tests of two paralyzed men participating in the BrainGate2 clinical trial offered a way to observe this rehearsal in humans. In the study, electrode arrays were implanted in the participants’ brains and linked to computers, with the goal of developing ways to allow people’s thoughts to control computer cursors and other devices. Two volunteers played a copycat game similar to Simon, in which four colored quadrants, each with a different sound tone, light up...

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