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Ancient Egyptian City Spotted From Space
Hurricane Hunting 6/15/2007
Synthetic life patent sought 6/10/07
Modern Brains Have Ancient Cores 7/2/07
Anthropological Discovery Reported in Peru 7/28/07
First Americans 6/16/07
Rise of Man 400,000 years off 6/29/07
Scottish Solstice Circle Discovered 7/5/07
Drought Uncovers Artifacts in Fla. Lake
Britain Serpent Mound Found 7/5/07
Hidden City Found Beneath Alexandria 7/27/07
Bio-plastics from Potatoes 6/15/2007
Laser Mapping Ancient Sites 7/26/07
Sumerian Beer 7/16/07
Roswell Deathbed Confession 7/23/07
Myhtbusters Bust Arrowheads 6/25/07
Dead Sea Scrolls Debate 6/28/07
Back From the Dead 7/18/07
Quantum Communicating 6/12/07
Einstein's Theory Tested 6/24/07
Inca Remains Found in Norway 6/28/06
Mythical Satyr Preserved in Salt? 7/24/07
Wireless energy promise powers up
Million Year Old Human Tooth Found 7/1/07
Plants Recognize Their Siblings 7/9/07
Newton Predicted World End 6/19/07
Rewriting History 7/27/07
Upton Chamber Preserved 6/22/07
Holy Grail in Rome 6/25/07
NASA Finds Water on Alien Planet 7/11/07
When We Spoke as One 7/21/07
Kenya: Maasais, Canaanites And the Inca Connection
Space Colonization Imperative 7/17/07
Astronomers Seek Aid in Galactic Census 7/12/07
Artifacts hidden for centuries emerging
Polynesians Found Americas Before Columbus
The Ancient Pueblo Landscapes 7/11/07
Heartbeat Powered Cell Phones 7/25/07
Human Origin Impossible to Pinpoint 7/19/07
All Royal Mummies Are Suspect 7/13/07
Easter Island Statues Destroyed Eco System 7/6/07
Whalebone Mask May Rewrite History 7/30/2007
Ancient mariner tools found 7/20/07
Printable Solar Panels 8/1/2007
Archaeological Sensation in Oestfold 8/2/2007
King Tut's Tomb Glass Identified 8/3/2007
Human, Neandertal Interbreeding Theory 8/4/07
Physicists solve levitation problem 8/5/07
Comet theory and Clovis research 8/6/07
10 Unsolved Mysteries of the Brain 8/7/07
First Europeans Came From Asia 8/7/07
New View of the Dawn of Civilization 8/8/07
Scholar Revives Ancient Subject 8/8/07
Study Finds Twist in Human Evolution 8/9/07
Fight on to save Stone Age Atlantis 8/11/07
Gravity Trick Grows Perfect Crystals 8/12/07
Synthetic Life Near, Scientists Say 8/13/07
Sea mud records supernova 11/05/07
Stonehenge's support settlement 11/06/07
World's Oldest Inscription Found 11/07/07
Extinction Theory Falls From Favor 11/08/07
Astronomers discover new planet 11/09/07
Musical Code in Da Vinci Painting 11/09/07
4,000 yr old Temple unearthed in Peru 11/10/07
Prehistoric passion for fashion 11/11/07
Scientists decode whale sounds 11/12/07
Clue to cosmic rays discovered 11/13/07
Zombie Attack at Hierakonpolis 11/14/07
Progress toward 'printing' organs 11/15/07
Artic Ocean about-face 11/15/07
Strange African Space Weather 11/15/07
Fuel Cells from Algae 11/16/07
Small planets in the Pleiades 11/17/07
Paralysed man's mind 'read' 11/18/07
Classifying Life, Most is Unknown 11/18/07
Women warriors in ancient Cambodia 11/19/07
Wormholes on Earth? 11/19/20
Eco-ruin 'felled early society' 11/20/07
Noah's flood spurred Euro farming 11/21/07
new scenario for first life on Earth 11/22/07
Space telescopes of tomorrow 11/23/07
Organ transplants grown in lab 11/24/07
Biblical history or end of the world 11/25/07
Ancient supercontinent study 11/26/07
Mankind 'shortening the universe's life' 11/27/07
Study supports Bering Strait migration 11/28/07
Million-year-old ice reveals microbes 11/29/07
Music, the Ancestor of Medicine 11/30/07
A theory whose time has come...again 12/01/07
World’s largest laser picks up the pace 12/02/07
Scientists solve cosmological puzzle 12/03/07
Power struggle over ancient bones 12/03/07
Aurora Borealis breaks new grounds 12/04/07
Everest footprint stoke Yeti mystery 12/04/07
Centuries-Old Map Baffles Researchers 12/05/07
Prehistoric sea ‘monster’ discovered 12/06/07
Radio antenna made of star material 12/07/07
Freezing Light 12/08/07
'Snowball Earth' was more a slushball 12/09/07
SETI - Aliens apart 12/10/07
Muons Meet the Maya 12/10/07
Ancient flood halted Gulf Stream 12/11/07
Probe discovers solar system is bent 12/11/07
Is Human Evolution Speeding Up? 12/12/07
Ultrasound 'scalpels' for surgery 12/12/07
NY Island Plundered for Artifacts 12/13/07
Great beasts peppered from space 12/14/07
Signs of microbial life on Mars 12/15/07
Your Brain and Faith 12/16/07
The mother of all civilisations 12/17/07
Unraveling 'dolphinese' chatter 12/18/07
Space impacts made life flourish 12/18/07
New explanation of Tunguska event 12/19/07
Doing the Math on Warp Drive 12/20/07
Aliens Exploring Earth 12/21/07
Lakota declare independence 12/21/07
The Lost Fort of Columbus 12/22/07
'Drilling Up' Into Space for Energy 12/23/07
Ice skating invented in 3000 BC 12/25/07
Extraordinary discovery in Sahara 12/27/07
Egypt to copyright pyramids 12/28/07
Did Bell steal phone idea 12/29/07
Britain Cave Art "Significant" 8/14/07
Did Life Come From Space 8/15/07
THE 'WOW' MYSTERY TURNS 30 8/17/07
Seabed survey for Dwarka evidence 8/18/07
Trying to fathom farming's origins 8/19/07
New Ancient Chinese Civilization 8/20/07
The Kensington Runestone Mystery 8/21/07
Burial mounds trouble for developers 8/22/08
Jupiter Protector 8/31/07
Rare dead star found near Earth 8/23/07
Gaping hole found in universe 8/25/07
Humans' DNA Not Quite So Similar 9/4/07
Out-of-body experience recreated 8/26/07
Study: Martian soil may contain life 8/24/07
The Dawn of Art 8/27/07
mystery of human migrations 8/27/07
Rare Aurigid Meteor Shower 8/30/2007
China Bans Reincarnation 8/31/07
Power to the People 9/01/07
Dinos Survived Cataclysm? 9/02/07
3,000-year-old beehives unearthed 9/5/07
Mapping Turkey's sunken heritage 9/6/07
Gene Bank to Combat Extinction 9/7/07
Uruguayan theory on Egypt Evolution 9/8/07
Battery Breakthrough Expected 9/10/07
Neuroscience and Fundamentalism 9/11/07
Energy Source: Burning Seawater 9/12/07
Hunting the holy grail of fusion 9/13/07
'Super-scope' to see hidden texts 9/14/07
Engage the antimatter drive 9/15/07
Find located beneath the waves 9/16/07
Space Solar Power Gets a Boost 9/17/07
Sloppy Science 9/18/07
Scores ill in Peru 'meteor crash' 9/18/07
History Rewritten on Cherokee 9/19/07
Stonehenge of the North 9/20/07
'Hobbit' wrists 'were primitive' 9/21/07
Japan's Underwater "Pyramid" 9/22/07
Atmosphere theories revised 9/23/07
Plants and Animals: Relatives? 9/24/07
Aztecs and Pharaohs 9/25/07
Ice age Aussies sheltered in caves 9/26/07
Scientist reworks star distances 9/28/07
Birds See Magnetic Fields? 9/30/07
Parallel Universes Exist -Study 10/1/07
Defending Einstein thoeies 10/3/07
Raiders of the faux ark 10/4/07
Ancient world treasure unearthed 10/6/07
'Unknown' Amazon tribe seen 10/7/07
Scientist debunks Aborigine 'myth' 10/8/07
Great floods cut off Britain 10/9/07
Ice age only froze the North 10/10/07
Searching for God in the Brain 10/11/07
Oldest Wall Painting Unearthed 10/12/07
I am creating artificial life 10/14/07
Columbus toppled 10/14/07
Humans' dusty origins 10/15/07
Vision-inducing drug makes inroads 10/15/07
Mesoamerica's Mother Culture 10/16/07
Retracing Indian trade routes 10/16/07
First Farmers Wanted Clothes 10/17/07
Floating Obelisk on Nile 10/18/07
Early humans threw clambakes 10/18/07
Tribal Remains Returned 10/19/07
8000 Yr Old Residence Found 10/20/07
Will Muons Reveal Maya Mysteries? 10/21/07
Hand Held Super Computers 10/22/07
'Bioplastics' seek market niche 10/23/07
Rabbi Reveals Name of the Messiah 10/24/07
Micro-robot that can clear arteries 10/25/07
Red hair, language for Neanderthals? 10/26/07
Curse protects land 10/27
New Ideas About Human Migration 10/28/07
'Megadrought' cued ancient exodus 10/29/07
Mega-volcanoes killed dinosaurs? 10/30/07
Mystery of Minoan fate 11/01/07
Chinese medicine Rosetta Stone 11/02/07
Ancient skeleton 'even older' 11/03/07
Origin of 'breathable' atmosphere 11/03/07
'Growing' Computer Components 11/04/07
Black Holes Shape Galaxies? 11/04/07
Thoughts to Speech
10 Unsolved Mysteries Of The Brain
What we know—and don’t know—about how we think.
by David Eagleman
 
Of all the objects in the universe, the human brain is the most complex: There are as many neurons in the brain as there are stars in the Milky Way galaxy. So it is no surprise that, ¬despite the glow from recent advances in the science of the brain and mind, we still find ourselves squinting in the dark somewhat. But we are at least beginning to grasp the crucial mysteries of neuroscience and starting to make headway in addressing them. Even partial answers to these 10 questions could restructure our understanding of the roughly three-pound mass of gray and white matter that defines who we are.

1. How is information coded in neural activity?
Neurons, the specialized cells of the brain, can produce brief spikes of voltage in their outer membranes. These electrical pulses travel along specialized extensions called axons to cause the release of chemical signals elsewhere in the brain. The binary, all-or-nothing spikes appear to carry information about the world: What do I see? Am I hungry? Which way should I turn? But what is the code of these millisecond bits of voltage? Spikes may mean different things at different places and times in the brain. In parts of the central nervous system (the brain and spinal cord), the rate of spiking often correlates with clearly definable external features, like the presence of a color or a face. In the peripheral nervous system, more spikes indicates more heat, a louder sound, or a stronger muscle contraction.
As we delve deeper into the brain, however, we find populations of neurons involved in more complex phenomena, like reminiscence, value judgments, simulation of possible futures, the desire for a mate, and so on—and here the signals become difficult to decrypt. The challenge is something like popping the cover off a computer, measuring a few transistors chattering between high and low voltage, and trying to guess the content of the Web page being surfed.
It is likely that mental information is stored not in single cells but in populations of cells and patterns of their activity. However, it is currently not clear how to know which neurons belong to a particular group; worse still, current technologies (like sticking fine electrodes directly into the brain) are not well suited to measuring several thousand neurons at once. Nor is it simple to monitor the connections of even one neuron: A typical neuron in the cortex receives input from some 10,000 other neurons.
Although traveling bursts of voltage can carry signals across the brain quickly, those electrical spikes may not be the only—or even the main—way that information is carried in nervous systems. ¬Forward-looking studies are examining other possible information couriers: glial cells (poorly understood brain cells that are 10 times as common as neurons), other kinds of signaling mechanisms between cells (such as newly discovered gases and peptides), and the biochemical cascades that take place inside cells.

2. How are memories stored and retrieved?
When you learn a new fact, like someone’s name, there are physical changes in the structure of your brain. But we don’t yet comprehend exactly what those changes are, how they are orchestrated across vast seas of synapses and neurons, how they embody knowledge, or how they are read out decades later for retrieval.
One complication is that there are many kinds of memories. The brain seems to distinguish short-term memory (remembering a phone number just long enough to dial it) from long-term memory (what you did on your last birthday). Within long-term memory, declarative memories (like names and facts) are distinct from non¬declarative memories (riding a bicycle, being affected by a subliminal message), and within these general categories are numerous subtypes. Different brain structures seem to support different kinds of learning and memory; brain damage can lead to the loss of one type without disturbing the others.
Nonetheless, similar molecular mechanisms may be at work in these memory types. Almost all theories of memory propose that memory storage depends on synapses, the tiny connections between brain cells. When two cells are active at the same time, the connection between them strengthens; when they are not active at the same time, the connection weakens. Out of such synaptic changes emerges an association. Experience can, for example, fortify the connections between the smell of coffee, its taste, its color, and the feel of its warmth. Since the populations of neurons connected with each of these sensations are typically activated at the same time, the connections between them can cause all the sensory associations of coffee to be triggered by the smell alone.
But looking only at associations—and strengthened connections between neurons—may not be enough to explain memory. The great secret of memory is that it mostly encodes the relationships between things more than the details of the things themselves. When you memorize a melody, you encode the relationships between the notes, not the notes per se, which is why you can easily sing the song in a different key.
Memory retrieval is even more mysterious than storage. When I ask if you know Alex Ritchie, the answer is immediately obvious to you, and there is no good theory to explain how memory retrieval can happen so quickly. Moreover, the act of retrieval can destabilize the memory. When you recall a past event, the memory becomes temporarily susceptible to erasure. Some intriguing recent experiments show it is possible to chemically block memories from reforming during that window, suggesting new ethical questions that require careful consideration.