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Is The Brain an Analog Computer? Consciousness as Dynamic Brainwave Organization | Earl Miller

Professor Earl Miller discusses, Mind-Body Solution podcast.

Earl K. Miller is the Picower Professor of Neuroscience at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He has faculty positions in The Picower Institute for Learning and Memory and the Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences. He holds degrees from Kent State University (B.A.) and Princeton University (M.A., Ph.D.) as well as an honorary Doctor of Science from Kent State University.


For decades, neuroscience treated the brain like a digital machine — storing information in synaptic connections and sustaining activity like a switch flipped on. But what if that model is incomplete?

In this conversation, I sit down with Earl Miller, MIT professor and head of the Miller Lab, to explore a growing shift in cognitive neuroscience: the brain may compute using dynamic electrical waves.

We discuss how oscillations coordinate millions of neurons, how waves interact with spikes in a two-way system, why large-scale brain organization may depend on rhythmic patterns, and what this means for artificial intelligence.

Tumor-immune-neural circuit disrupts energy homeostasis in cancer cachexia

Tumor-immune-neural circuit in cancer cachexia.

The mechanisms involved in cancer-mediated cachexia and anorexia are not well understood.

The researchers in this study delineate an interplay among tumor cells, immune cells, and the nervous system that drives cancer cachexia and anorexia.

The authors show thay loss of GDF15 protects against appetite loss, muscle wasting, and fat loss in pancreatic, lung, and skin cancers.

Disrupting this feedforward loop with GDF15-neutralizing antibody, anti-CSF1R antibody, or Rearranged during Transfection (RET) inhibitor alleviates cachexia and anorexia across cancer models. sciencenewshighlights ScienceMission https://sciencemission.com/Tumor-immune-neural-circuit


Shi et al. delineate an interplay among tumor cells, immune cells, and the nervous system that drives cancer cachexia and anorexia. Specifically, tumor-derived CSF1 induces macrophage GDF15, which signals through the GFRAL-RET neural axis to enhance β-adrenergic activity and systemic wasting. Disrupting this feedforward loop alleviates cachexia across cancer models.

Mapping ADHD Heterogeneity and Biotypes by Topological Deviations in Morphometric Similarity Networks

Normative modeling of morphometric similarity networks in ADHD identified three distinct biotypes with unique clinical-neural profiles, supporting more neurobiologically informed stratification for ADHD management.


Question Can normative modeling of topological properties derived from brain morphometric similarity networks yield robust stratification biomarkers for pediatric populations with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)?

Findings This multisite case-control study included 1,154 participants, characterizing ADHD heterogeneity through hub-centric topological deviations derived from morphometric similarity networks. Three distinct biotypes emerged, each exhibiting unique clinical-neural profiles with characteristic neurochemical and functional correlates, validated in an independent transdiagnostic cohort of 554 ADHD cases.

Meaning The integration of normative modeling with heterogeneity through discriminative analysis (HYDRA) clustering yielded both dimensional and categorical insights into ADHD heterogeneity, thereby enhancing our understanding of the ADHD’s neurobiological complexity.

Associations of Lifetime Cognitive Enrichment With Incident Alzheimer Disease Dementia, Cognitive Aging, and Cognitive Resilience

Study results suggest that cognitive health in later life is in part the product of lifetime exposure to cognitive enrichment.


Background and Objectives.

A Reflection on Movement Disorders Fellowship Training in Deep Brain Stimulation: Past and Future

A Reflection on Movement Disorders —Fellowship Training in Deep Brain Stimulation: Past and Future.


Deep brain stimulation (DBS) has been an integral part of movement disorders care for decades. However, differences exist in techniques for surgical implantation of DBS and clinician experience with DBS systems, including use of new software, programming approaches, and postsurgical management of patients. DBS technologies have been rapidly advancing, and indications for DBS are increasing, including for psychiatric symptoms and epilepsy. The heterogeneity in the scope and utility of DBS is perhaps mirrored in education and training, despite efforts to develop competency measures for trainees. These advancements in DBS and the varying opportunities offered at each fellowship contribute to challenges for program directors to establish and implement consistent expectations. Similar challenges have been observed in other fields using neuromodulation.

Two lipids that help switch on STING open doors in fight against autoimmune disorders and cancer

UT Southwestern Medical Center researchers have identified two lipids that work together with a quintessential protein known as stimulator of interferon genes (STING) to launch an immune response in the human body. Their findings, detailed in two papers published concurrently in Nature, could lead to new ways to manipulate the immune system to fight infections, cancer, autoimmune disorders, and neurodegenerative diseases.

“These studies reveal additional levels of regulation of the cGAS-STING pathway, underscoring the importance of controlling the activity of this pathway so the body can mount an effective immune response against infections while avoiding autoimmune reactions to self-tissues. Dysregulation of this pathway has been shown to cause a variety of autoimmune and inflammatory diseases,” said Zhijian “James” Chen, Ph.D., Professor of Molecular Biology and Director of the Center for Inflammation Research at UT Southwestern.

Dr. Chen, one of the world’s leading researchers on innate immunity, is a co-author on one study and senior author on the other. His discovery of cGAS, an enzyme that produces a molecule called cGAMP to activate STING, has been recognized with numerous top honors including the 2026 Japan Prize in Life Sciences, the 2024 Albert Lasker Basic Medical Research Award, and the 2019 Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences.

Common anti-seizure drug prevents Alzheimer’s plaques from forming

At the heart of the new discovery is amyloid precursor protein (APP), a protein that plays important roles in brain development and synaptic formation. Abnormal processing of APP can lead to the production of amyloid‑beta peptides, which play a central role in the development of Alzheimer’s disease. The scientists found that how APP is trafficked also controls whether a neuron forms amyloid-beta 42.

During the synaptic vesicle cycle — a fundamental process that underlies every thought, movement, memory or sensation — levetiracetam binds to a protein called SV2A. This interaction slows down a step in which neurons recycle synaptic vesicle components from the cell’s surface. By pausing this recycling process, the drug enables APP to remain on the cell’s surface longer, diverting it away from the pathway that produces toxic amyloid‑beta 42 proteins.

“In our 30s, 40s and 50s, our brains are generally able to steer proteins away from harmful pathways,” the author said. “As we age, that protective ability gradually weakens. This is not a statement of disease; this is just a part of aging. But in brains developing Alzheimer’s, too many neurons go astray, and that’s when you get amyloid-beta 42 production. And then it’s tau (or ‘tangles’), and then it’s dead cells, then dementia, then neuroinflammation — and then it’s too late.”

To effectively prevent Alzheimer’s symptoms, high-risk individuals would need to begin taking levetiracetam “very, very early,” the author said, possibly up to 20 years before the new FDA-approved Alzheimer’s disease test would even capture mildly elevated levels of amyloid-beta 42.

“You couldn’t take this when you already have dementia because the brain has already undergone a number of irreversible changes and a lot of cell death,” the author said.

Leveraging its status as an FDA-approved and widely used drug, the team mined existing human clinical data to investigate whether Alzheimer’s patients who took levetiracetam experienced slowed cognitive decline. They obtained clinical data from the National Alzheimer’s Coordinating Center and conducted a correlative analysis, finding that Alzheimer’s patients who took levetiracetam were associated with a significant delay from the diagnosis of cognitive decline to death compared to those taking lorazepam or no/other anti-epileptic drugs. ScienceMission sciencenewshighlights.


Cryosphere Chat — Tomorrow Bio’s Big Announcement, Biostasis Summit Updates

In this epsiode of the Cryosphere Chat we discuss:
● The themes of this year’s Biostasis Summit.
● Our thoughts on Tomorrw Bio’s big announcement about longevity experts.
● Greg Fahy’s paper on ultrastructure preservation in vitrified brains.

Links:
Buy tickets for the Biostasis days at Vitalist Bay: https://vitalistbay.com/ (use code CRYOSPHERE20 for 20% off)
Biostasis Summit needs based discount application: https://forms.gle/4pR3r4uvXprc4mH99
Biostasis Summit pitch application: https://forms.gle/FQsqx9thLvryKteq8
Join the Biostasis Summit mailing list: https://www.globalcryonicssummit.com/
Survey of cryonicists: https://cryospherepress.substack.com/p/the-cryonics-survey-of-2022-part.
Cryonics Subreddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/cryonics/
Cryosphere Discord: https://discord.gg/ndshSfQwqz.
Cryosphere Substack: https://cryospherepress.substack.com/

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