Print

Print


http://msnbc.msn.com/id/9853910/

How do our brains keep track of time?


‘Interval time’ function may be distributed widely

 

livescience



• The brain
An interactive road map to the mind

By Robert Roy Britt
LiveScience managing editor
Updated: 4:14 p.m. ET Oct. 28, 2005

Your brain is a time machine with three modes that control everything from 
instantaneous tasks such as moving, to maintaining long trains of thought and 
ultimately staying in synch with night and day. 


That's what scientists say. But they have no clue how most of it works. 


Focusing on the poorly understood middle time zone, where the brain does some 
of its best work, researchers at Duke University summarize this latest 
thinking in a new article in the journal Nature Reviews Neuroscience. 

Story continues below ↓
 advertisement 

Scientists have long understood human and animal brains to be governed in part 
by a circadian clock, which keeps us in synch with night and day. The rhythm 
of this 24-hour clock encourages nighttime sleep and allows many people to 
awaken with no help from a rooster.


Another clock is thought to operate at the millisecond level, controlling 
movement and speech, among other vital functions that occur so quickly we 
don't really think about them. 


But in between, there must be a third timekeeper of the mind to aid all the 
functions that require seconds to minutes of attention. Nobody is sure about 
this, though.


Interval timing
Duke neuroscientists Warren Meck and Catalin Buhusi call the middle mode 
"interval timing."


"To understand speech, I not only have to process the millisecond intervals 
involved in voice onset time, but also the duration of vowels and 
consonants," Meck said Friday. "Also, to respond, I need to process the 
pacing of speech, to organize my thoughts coherently and to respond back to 
you in a timely manner."


Interval timing has not been studied in detail. In fact it may be very hard to 
look into it. 


Meck has been pondering it since the 1980s, but little progress has been made 
in pinning down how it works. He suspects the interval-timing clock does not 
reside in a single location, as is the case with smell, taste and other 
senses. Even the circadian clock is located in one part of the brain. 


In contrast, interval timing "has to be distributed so it can integrate 
information from all the senses," Meck said Friday. 


Figuring out how it works may turn out to be more important in understanding 
the brain that the spatial connections between various parts of the brain. 


"I would argue that time is more fundamental than space, because one can just 
close one's eyes and relive memories, going back in time," Buhusi says, "or 
prospectively go forward in time to predict something, without actually 
changing your position in space."


The conductor and the orchestra
Theorists used to think interval timing was orchestrated by some sort of 
biological pacemaker that emitted timing pulses. 


The new thinking is that the various parts of the brain oscillate, and all 
these oscillations are monitored and integrated by certain circuits, perhaps 
in the basal ganglia, an area of the brain that controls basic functions such 
as movement.


"It's like a conductor who listens to the orchestra, which is composed of 
individual musicians," Buhusi explains. "Then, with the beat of his baton, 
the conductor synchronizes the orchestra so that listeners hear a coordinated 
sound."






How well do you know your brain?



The new paper by Meck and Buhusi lists the various challenges to cracking the 
interval timing mechanism and outlines techniques being employed. As with 
many attempts to understand the brain, researchers are looking at what 
happens when it stops working normally. 


"When Parkinson's patients are on their medication, they time quite normally," 
Meck said. "But as their medication wears off, we can see their clock slow 
down by recording their brain signals."

© 2005 LiveScience.com. All rights reserved. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------
To sign-off Parkinsn send a message to: mailto:[log in to unmask]
In the body of the message put: signoff parkinsn