text
stringlengths 96
1.02k
|
---|
DR. MICHIO KAMI
PROFESSOR OF THEORETICAL PHYSICS
CITY UNIVERSITY OI : NEW YORK
THE SCIENTIFIC QUEST TO UNDERSTAND
ENHANCE, AND EMPOWER THE MIND
DOUBLEPAY
NEW YORK LONDON TORONTO
SYDNEY AUCKLAND
Copyright © 2014 by Michio Kaku
All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Doubleday, a division of Random House,
LLC, New York, and in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto, Penguin Random
House companies.
www.doubleday.com
doubleday and the portrayal of an anchor with a dolphin are registered trademarks of Random
House, LLC.
Illustrations by Jeffrey L. Ward
Jacket design by Michael J. Windsor
Jacket illustration © CLIP AREA/Custom media/Shutterstock
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA
Kaku, Michio.
The future of the mind : the scientific quest to understand, enhance, and empower the mind /
Dr. Michio Kaku, professor of Theoretical Physics, City University of New York. — First edition,
pages cm
Includes bibliographical references. |
Includes bibliographical references.
1. Neuropsychology. 2. Mind and body—Research.
3. Brain—Mathematical models. 4. Cognitive neuroscience.
5. Brain-computer interfaces. I. Title.
qp360.k 325 2014
612.8—dc23
2013017338
ISBN 978-0-385-53082-8 (hardcover) ISBN 978-0-385-53083-5 (eBook)
v3.1
This book is dedicated to my loving wife, Shizue,
and my daughters, Michelle and Alyson
CONTENTS
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
INTRODUCTION
BOOK I: THE MIND AND CONSCIOUSNESS
1 UNLOCKING THE MIND
2 CONSCIOUSNESS—A PHYSICIST’S VIEWPOINT
BOOK II: MIND OVER MATTER
3 TELEPATHY: A PENNY FOR YOUR THOUGHTS
4 TELEKINESIS: MIND CONTROLLING MATTER
5 MEMORIES AND THOUGHTS MADE TO ORDER
6 EINSTEIN’S BRAIN AND ENHANCING OUR INTELLIGENCE
BOOK III: ALTERED CONSCIOUSNESS
7 IN YOUR DREAMS
8 CAN THE MIND BE CONTROLLED?
9 ALTERED STATES OF CONSCIOUSNESS
10 THE ARTIFICIAL MIND AND SILICON CONSCIOUSNESS
11 REVERSE ENGINEERING THE BRAIN |
10 THE ARTIFICIAL MIND AND SILICON CONSCIOUSNESS
11 REVERSE ENGINEERING THE BRAIN
12 THE FUTURE: MIND BEYOND MATTER
13 THE MIND AS PURE ENERGY
14 THE ALIEN MIND
15 CONCLUDING REMARKS
APPENDIX: QUANTUM CONSCIOUSNESS?
NOTES
SUGGESTED READING
ILLUSTRATION CREDITS
A Note About the Author
Other Books by This Author
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
It has been my great pleasure to have interviewed and interacted with
the following prominent scientists, all of them leaders in their fields. I
would like to thank them for graciously giving up their time for
interviews and discussions about the future of science. They have given
me guidance and inspiration, as well as a firm foundation in their
respective fields.
I would like to thank these pioneers and trailblazers, especially those
who have agreed to appear on my TV specials for the BBC, Discovery,
and Science TV channels, and also on my national radio shows, Science
Fantastic and Explorations. |
Peter Doherty, Nobel laureate, St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital
Gerald Edelman, Nobel laureate, Scripps Research Institute
Leon Lederman, Nobel laureate, Illinois Institute of Technology
Murray Gell-Mann, Nobel laureate, Santa Fe Institute and Cal Tech
the late Henry Kendall, Nobel laureate, MIT
Walter Gilbert, Nobel laureate, Harvard University
David Gross, Nobel laureate, Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics
Joseph Rotblat, Nobel laureate, St. Bartholomew’s Hospital
Yoichiro Nambu, Nobel laureate, University of Chicago
Steven Weinberg, Nobel laureate, University of Texas at Austin
Frank Wilczek, Nobel laureate, MIT
Amir Aczel, author of Uranium Wars
Buzz Aldrin, NASA astronaut, second man to walk on the moon
Geoff Andersen, U.S. Air Force Academy, author of The Telescope
Jay Barbree, author of Moon Shot
John Barrow, physicist, Cambridge University, author of Impossibility
Marcia Bartusiak, author of Einstein’s Unfinished Symphony |
Marcia Bartusiak, author of Einstein’s Unfinished Symphony
Jim Bell, Cornell University astronomer
Jeffrey Bennet, author of Beyond UFOs
Bob Berman, astronomer, author The Secrets of the Night Sky
Leslie Biesecker, National Institutes of Health
Piers Bizony, author of How to Build Your Own Starship
Michael Blaese, National Institutes of Health
Alex Boese, founder of Museum of Hoaxes
Nick Bostrom, transhumanist, Oxford University
Lt. Col. Robert Bowman, Institute for Space and Security Studies
Cynthia Breazeal, artificial intelligence, MIT Media Lab
Lawrence Brody, National Institutes of Health
Rodney Brooks, director of the MIT Artificial Intelligence Laboratory
Lester Brown, Earth Policy Institute
Michael Brown, astronomer, Cal Tech
James Canton, author of The Extreme Future
Arthur Caplan, director of the Center for Bioethics at the University of
Pennsylvania |
Arthur Caplan, director of the Center for Bioethics at the University of
Pennsylvania
Fritjof Capra, author of The Science of Leonardo
Sean Carroll, cosmologist, Cal Tech
Andrew Chaikin, author of A Man on the Moon
Leroy Chiao, NASA astronaut
Eric Chivian, International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear
War
Deepak Chopra, author of Super Brain
George Church, director of Harvard’s Center for Computational
Genetics
Thomas Cochran, physicist, Natural Resources Defense Council
Christopher Cokinos, astronomer, author of Fallen Sky
Francis Collins, National Institutes of Health
Vicki Colvin, nanotechnologist, University of Texas
Neal Comins, author of Hazards of Space Travel
Steve Cook, NASA spokesperson
Christine Cosgrove, author of Normal at Any Cost
Steve Cousins, CEO of Willow Garage Personal Robots Program
Phillip Coyle, former assistant secretary of defense for the U.S. Defense
Department
Daniel Crevier, AI, CEO of Coreco |
Daniel Crevier, AI, CEO of Coreco
Ken Croswell, astronomer, author of Magnificent Universe
Steven Cummer, computer science, Duke University
Mark Cutkowsky, mechanical engineering, Stanford University
Paul Davies, physicist, author of Superforce
Daniel Dennet, philosopher, Tufts University
the late Michael Dertouzos, computer science, MIT
Jared Diamond, Pulitzer Prize winner, UCLA
Marriot DiChristina, Scientific American
Peter Dilworth, MIT AI Lab
John Donoghue, creator of Braingate, Brown University
Ann Druyan, widow of Carl Sagan, Cosmos Studios
Freeman Dyson, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton University
David Eagleman, neuroscientist, Baylor College of Medicine
John Ellis, CERN physicist
Paul Erlich, environmentalist, Stanford University
Daniel Fairbanks, author of Relics of Eden
Timothy Ferris, University of California, author of Coming of Age in the
Milky Way Galaxy
Maria Finitzo, stem cell expert, Peabody Award winner
Robert Finkelstein, AI expert |
Maria Finitzo, stem cell expert, Peabody Award winner
Robert Finkelstein, AI expert
Christopher Flavin, World Watch Institute
Louis Friedman, cofounder of the Planetary Society
Jack Gallant, neuroscientist, University of California at Berkeley
James Garwin, NASA chief scientist
Evelyn Gates, author of Einstein’s Telescope
Michael Gazzaniga, neurologist, University of California at Santa
Barbara
Jack Geiger, cofounder, Physicians for Social Responsibility
David Gelertner, computer scientist, Yale University, University of
California
Neal Gershenfeld, MIT Media Lab
Daniel Gilbert, psychologist, Harvard University
Paul Gilster, author of Centauri Dreams
Rebecca Goldberg, Environmental Defense Fund
Don Goldsmith, astronomer, author of Runaway Universe
David Goodstein, assistant provost of Cal Tech
J. Richard Gott III, Princeton University, author of Time Travel in
Einstein’s Universe
Late Stephen Jay Gould, biologist, Harvard University |
Late Stephen Jay Gould, biologist, Harvard University
Ambassador Thomas Graham, spy satellites and intelligence gathering
John Grant, author of Corrupted Science
Eric Green, National Institutes of Health
Ronald Green, author of Babies by Design
Brian Greene, Columbia University, author of The Elegant Universe
Alan Guth, physicist, MIT, author of The Inflationary Universe
William Hanson, author of The Edge of Medicine
Leonard Hayflick, University of California at San Francisco Medical
School
Donald Hillebrand, Argonne National Labs, future of the car
Frank N. von Hippel, physicist, Princeton University
Allan Hobson, psychiatrist, Harvard University
Jeffrey Hoffman, NASA astronaut, MIT
Douglas Hofstadter, Pulitzer Prize winner, Indiana University, author
of Godel, Escher, Bach
John Horgan, Stevens Institute of Technology, author of The End of
Science
Jamie Hyneman, host of MythBusters
Chris Impey, astronomer, author of The Living Cosmos
Robert Irie, AI Lab, MIT |
Chris Impey, astronomer, author of The Living Cosmos
Robert Irie, AI Lab, MIT
P. J. Jacobowitz, PC magazine
Jay Jaroslav, MIT AI Lab
Donald Johanson, anthropologist, discoverer of Lucy
George Johnson, New York Times science journalist
Tom Jones, NASA astronaut
Steve Kates, astronomer
Jack Kessler, stem cell expert, Peabody Award winner
Robert Kirshner, astronomer, Harvard University
Kris Koenig, astronomer
Lawrence Krauss, Arizona State University, author of Physics of Star
Trek
Lawrence Kuhn, filmmaker and philosopher, Closer to Truth
Ray Kurzweil, inventor, author of The Age of Spiritual Machines
Robert Lanza, biotechnology, Advanced Cell Technologies
Roger Launius, author of Robots in Space
Stan Lee, creator of Marvel Comics and Spider-Man
Michael Lemonick, senior science editor of Time
Arthur Lerner-Lam, geologist, volcanist
Simon LeVay, author of When Science Goes Wrong
John Lewis, astronomer, University of Arizona
Alan Lightman, MIT, author of Einstein’s Dreams |
John Lewis, astronomer, University of Arizona
Alan Lightman, MIT, author of Einstein’s Dreams
George Linehan, author of Space One
Seth Lloyd, MIT, author of Programming the Universe
Werner R. Loewenstein, former director of Cell Physics Laboratory,
Columbia University
Joseph Lykken, physicist, Fermi National Laboratory
Pattie Maes, MIT Media Lab
Robert Mann, author of Forensic Detective
Michael Paul Mason, author of Head Cases: Stories of Brain Injury and
Its Aftermath
Patrick McCray, author of Keep Watching the Skies
Glenn McGee, author of The Perfect Baby
James McLurkin, MIT, AI Lab
Paul McMillan, director of Space Watch
Fulvia Melia, astronomer, University of Arizona
William Meller, author of Evolution Rx
Paul Meltzer, National Institutes of Health
Marvin Minsky, MIT, author of The Society of Minds
Hans Moravec, author of Robot
Late Phillip Morrison, physicist, MIT |
Hans Moravec, author of Robot
Late Phillip Morrison, physicist, MIT
Richard Muller, astrophysicist, University of California at Berkeley
David Nahamoo, IBM Human Language Technology
Christina Neal, volcanist
Miguel Nicolelis, neuroscientist, Duke University
Shinji Nishimoto, neurologist, University of California at Berkeley
Michael Novacek, American Museum of Natural History
Michael Oppenheimer, environmentalist, Princeton University
Dean Ornish, cancer and heart disease specialist
Peter Palese, virologist, Mount Sinai School of Medicine
Charles Pellerin, NASA official
Sidney Perkowitz, author of Hollywood Science
John Pike, GlobalSecurity.org
Jena Pincott, author of Do Gentlemen Really Prefer Blondes?
Steven Pinker, psychologist, Harvard University
Thomas Poggio, MIT, artificial intelligence
Correy Powell, editor of Discover magazine
John Powell, founder of JP Aerospace |
Richard Preston, author of Hot Zone and Demon in the Freezer
Raman Prinja, astronomer, University College London
David Quammen, evolutionary biologist, author of The Reluctant Mr.
Darwin
Katherine Ramsland, forensic scientist
Lisa Randall, Harvard University, author of Warped Passages
Sir Martin Rees, Royal Astronomer of Great Britain, Cambridge
University, author of Before the Beginning
Jeremy Rifkin, Foundation for Economic Trends
David Riquier, MIT Media Lab
Jane Rissler, Union of Concerned Scientists
Steven Rosenberg, National Institutes of Health
Oliver Sacks, neurologist, Columbia University
Paul Saffo, futurist, Institute of the Future
Late Carl Sagan, Cornell University, author of Cosmos
Nick Sagan, coauthor of You Call This the Future?
Michael H. Salamon, NASA’s Beyond Einstein program
Adam Savage, host of MythBusters
Peter Schwartz, futurist, founder of Global Business Network
Michael Shermer, founder of Skeptic Society and Skeptic magazine |
Michael Shermer, founder of Skeptic Society and Skeptic magazine
Donna Shirley, NASA Mars program
Seth Shostak, SETI Institute
Neil Shubin, author of Your Inner Fish
Paul Shurch, SETI League
Peter Singer, author of Wired for War
Simon Singh, author of The Big Bang
Gary Small, author of iBrain
Paul Spudis, author of Odyssey Moon Limited
Stephen Squyres, astronomer, Cornell University
Paul Steinhardt, Princeton University, author of Endless Universe
Jack Stern, stem cell surgeon
Gregory Stock, UCLA, author of Redesigning Humans
Richard Stone, author of NEOs and Tunguska
Brian Sullivan, Hayden Planetarium
Leonard Susskind, physicist, Stanford University
Daniel Tammet, author of Bom on a Blue Day
Geoffrey Taylor, physicist, University of Melbourne
Late Ted Taylor, designer of U.S. nuclear warheads
Max Tegmark, cosmologist, MIT
Alvin Toffler, author of The Third Wave
Patrick Tucker, World Future Society |
Chris Turney, University of Wollongong, author of Ice, Mud and Blood
Neil de Grasse Tyson, director of Hayden Planetarium
Sesh Velamoor, Foundation for the Future
Robert Wallace, author of Spycraft
Kevin Warwick, human cyborgs, University of Reading, UK
Fred Watson, astronomer, author of Stargazer
Late Mark Weiser, Xerox PARC
Alan Weisman, author of The World Without Us
Daniel Wertheimer, SETI at Home, University of California at Berkeley
Mike Wessler, MIT AI Lab
Roger Wiens, astronomer, Los Alamos National Laboratory
Author Wiggins, author of The Joy of Physics
Anthony Wynshaw-Boris, National Institutes of Health
Carl Zimmer, biologist, author of Evolution
Robert Zimmerman, author of Leaving Earth
Robert Zubrin, founder of Mars Society |
I would also like to thank my agent, Stuart Krichevsky, who has been
at my side all these years and has given me helpful advice about my
books. I have always benefited from his sound judgment. In addition, I
would like to thank my editors, Edward Kastenmeier and Melissa
Danaczko, who have guided my book and provided invaluable editorial
advice. And I would like to thank Dr. Michelle Kaku, my daughter and a
neurology resident at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York, for stimulating,
thoughtful, and fruitful discussions about the future of neurology. Her
careful and thorough reading of the manuscript has greatly enhanced the
presentation and content of this book.
INTRODUCTION |
INTRODUCTION
The two greatest mysteries in all of nature are the mind and the
universe. With our vast technology, we have been able to photograph
galaxies billions of light-years away, manipulate the genes that control
life, and probe the inner sanctum of the atom, but the mind and the
universe still elude and tantalize us. They are the most mysterious and
fascinating frontiers known to science.
If you want to appreciate the majesty of the universe, just turn your
gaze to the heavens at night, ablaze with billions of stars. Ever since our
ancestors first gasped at the splendor of the starry sky, we have puzzled
over these eternal questions: Where did it all come from? What does it
all mean? |
To witness the mystery of our mind, all we have to do is stare at
ourselves in the mirror and wonder, What lurks behind our eyes? This
raises haunting questions like: Do we have a soul? What happens to us
after we die? Who am “I” anyway? And most important, this brings us to
the ultimate question: Where do we fit into this great cosmic scheme? As
the great Victorian biologist Thomas Huxley once said, “The question of
all questions for humanity, the problem which lies behind all others and
is more interesting than any of them, is that of the determination of
man’s place in Nature and his relation to the Cosmos.” |
There are 100 billion stars in the Milky Way galaxy, roughly the same
as the number of neurons in our brain. You may have to travel twenty-
four trillion miles, to the first star outside our solar system, to find an
object as complex as what is sitting on your shoulders. The mind and the
universe pose the greatest scientific challenge of all, but they also share
a curious relationship. On one hand they are polar opposites. One is
concerned with the vastness of outer space, where we encounter strange
denizens like black holes, exploding stars, and colliding galaxies. The
other is concerned with inner space, where we find our most intimate
and private hopes and desires. The mind is no farther than our next
thought, yet we are often clueless when asked to articulate and explain
it. |
thought, yet we are often clueless when asked to articulate and explain
it.
But although they may be opposites in this respect, they also have a
common history and narrative. Both were shrouded in superstition and
magic since time immemorial. Astrologers and phrenologists claimed to
find the meaning of the universe in every constellation of the zodiac and
in every bump on your head. Meanwhile, mind readers and seers have
been alternately celebrated and vilified over the years. |
The universe and the mind continue to intersect in a variety of ways,
thanks in no small part to some of the eye-opening ideas we often
encounter in science fiction. Reading these books as a child, I would
daydream about being a member of the Sian, a race of telepaths created
by A. E. van Vogt. I marveled at how a mutant called the Mule could
unleash his vast telepathic powers and nearly seize control of the
Galactic Empire in Isaac Asimov’s Foundation Trilogy. And in the movie
Forbidden Planet, I wondered how an advanced civilization millions of
years beyond ours could channel its enormous telekinetic powers to
reshape reality to its whims and wishes. |
Then when I was about ten, “The Amazing Dunninger” appeared on
TV. He would dazzle his audience with his spectacular magic tricks. His
motto was “For those who believe, no explanation is necessary; for those
who do not believe, no explanation will suffice.” One day, he declared
that he would send his thoughts to millions of people throughout the
country. He closed his eyes and began to concentrate, stating that he was
beaming the name of a president of the United States. He asked people
to write down the name that popped into their heads on a postcard and
mail it in. The next week, he announced triumphantly that thousands of
postcards had come pouring in with the name “Roosevelt,” the very
same name he was “beaming” across the United States. |
I wasn’t impressed. Back then, the legacy of Roosevelt was strong
among those who had lived through the Depression and World War II, so
this came as no surprise. (I thought to myself that it would have been
truly amazing if he had been thinking of President Millard Fillmore.)
Still, it stoked my imagination, and I couldn’t resist experimenting
with telepathy on my own, trying to read other people’s minds by
concentrating as hard as I could. Closing my eyes and focusing intently, I
would attempt to “listen” to other people’s thoughts and telekinetically
move objects around my room.
I failed. |
move objects around my room.
I failed.
Maybe somewhere telepaths walked the Earth, but I wasn’t one of
them. In the process, I began to realize that the wondrous exploits of
telepaths were probably impossible—at least without outside assistance.
But in the years that followed, I also slowly learned another lesson: to
fathom the greatest secrets in the universe, one did not need telepathic
or superhuman abilities. One just had to have an open, determined, and
curious mind. In particular, in order to understand whether the fantastic
devices of science fiction are possible, you have to immerse yourself in
advanced physics. To understand the precise point when the possible
becomes the impossible, you have to appreciate and understand the laws
of physics. |
These two passions have fired up my imagination all these years: to
understand the fundamental laws of physics, and to see how science will
shape the future of our lives. To illustrate this and to share my
excitement in probing the ultimate laws of physics, I have written the
books Hyperspace , Beyond Einstein, and Parallel Worlds. And to express
my fascination with the future, I have written Visions, Physics of the
Impossible, and Physics of the Future. Over the course of writing and
researching these books, I was continually reminded that the human
mind is still one of the greatest and most mysterious forces in the world.
Indeed, we’ve been at a loss to understand what it is or how it works
for most of history. The ancient Egyptians, for all their glorious
accomplishments in the arts and sciences, believed the brain to be a
useless organ and threw it away when embalming their pharaohs. |
Aristotle was convinced that the soul resided in the heart, not the brain,
whose only function was to cool down the cardiovascular system.
Others, like Descartes, thought that the soul entered the body through
the tiny pineal gland of the brain. But in the absence of any solid
evidence, none of these theories could be proven.
This “dark age” persisted for thousands of years, and with good
reason. The brain weighs only three pounds, yet it is the most complex
object in the solar system. Although it occupies only 2 percent of the
body’s weight, the brain has a ravenous appetite, consuming fully 20
percent of our total energy (in newborns, the brain consumes an
astonishing 65 percent of the baby’s energy), while fully 80 percent of
our genes are coded for the brain. There are an estimated 100 billion
neurons residing inside the skull with an exponential amount of neural
connections and pathways. |
Back in 1977, when the astronomer Carl Sagan wrote his Pulitzer
Prize-winning book, The Dragons of Eden, he broadly summarized what
was known about the brain up to that time. His book was beautifully
written and tried to represent the state of the art in neuroscience, which
at that time relied heavily on three main sources. The first was
comparing our brains with those of other species. This was tedious and
difficult because it involved dissecting the brains of thousands of
animals. The second method was equally indirect: analyzing victims of
strokes and disease, who often exhibit bizarre behavior because of their
illness. Only an autopsy performed after their death could reveal which
part of the brain was malfunctioning. Third, scientists could use
electrodes to probe the brain and slowly and painfully piece together
which part of the brain influenced which behavior. |
But the basic tools of neuroscience did not provide a systematic way of
analyzing the brain. You could not simply requisition a stroke victim
with damage in the specific area you wanted to study. Since the brain is
a living, dynamic system, autopsies often did not uncover the most
interesting features, such as how the parts of the brain interact, let alone
how they produced such diverse thoughts as love, hate, jealousy, and
curiosity.
TWIN REVOLUTIONS
Four hundred years ago, the telescope was invented, and almost
overnight, this new, miraculous instrument peered into the heart of the
celestial bodies. It was one of the most revolutionary (and seditious)
instruments of all time. All of a sudden, with your own two eyes, you |
could see the myths and dogma of the past evaporate like the morning
mist. Instead of being perfect examples of divine wisdom, the moon had
jagged craters, the sun had black spots, Jupiter had moons, Venus had
phases, and Saturn had rings. More was learned about the universe in
the fifteen years after the invention of the telescope than in all human
history put together.
Like the invention of the telescope, the introduction of MRI machines
and a variety of advanced brain scans in the mid-1990s and 2000s has
transformed neuroscience. We have learned more about the brain in the
last fifteen years than in all prior human history, and the mind, once
considered out of reach, is finally assuming center stage. |
Nobel laureate Eric R. Kandel of the Max Planck Institute in Tubingen,
Germany, writes, “The most valuable insights into the human mind to
emerge during this period did not come from the disciplines traditionally
concerned with the mind—philosophy, psychology, or psycho-analysis.
Instead they came from a merger of these disciplines with the biology of
the brain....”
Physicists have played a pivotal role in this endeavor, providing a
flood of new tools with acronyms like MRI, EEG, PET, CAT, TCM, TES,
and DBS that have dramatically changed the study of the brain.
Suddenly with these machines we could see thoughts moving within the
living, thinking brain. As neurologist V. S. Ramachandran of the
University of California, San Diego, says, “All of these questions that
philosophers have been studying for millennia, we scientists can begin to
explore by doing brain imaging and by studying patients and asking the
right questions.” |
Looking back, some of my initial forays into the world of physics
intersected with the very technologies that are now opening up the mind
for science. In high school, for instance, I became aware of a new form
of matter, called antimatter, and decided to conduct a science project on
the topic. As it is one of the most exotic substances on Earth, I had to
appeal to the old Atomic Energy Commission just to obtain a tiny
quantity of sodium-22, a substance that naturally emits a positive
electron (anti-electron, or positron). With my small sample in hand, I
was able to build a cloud chamber and powerful magnetic field that
allowed me to photograph the trails of vapor left by antimatter particles.
I didn’t know it at the time, but sodium-22 would soon become
instrumental in a new technology, called PET (positron emission
tomography), which has since given us startling new insights into the
thinking brain. |
Yet another technology I experimented with in high school was
magnetic resonance. I attended a lecture by Felix Bloch of Stanford
University, who shared the 1952 Nobel Prize for Physics with Edward
Purcell for the discovery of nuclear magnetic resonance. Dr. Bloch
explained to us high school kids that if you had a powerful magnetic
field, the atoms would align vertically in that field like compass needles.
Then if you applied a radio pulse to these atoms at a precise resonant
frequency, you could make them flip over. When they eventually flipped
back, they would emit another pulse, like an echo, which would allow
you to determine the identity of these atoms. (Later, I used the principle
of magnetic resonance to build a 2.3-million-electron-volt particle
accelerator in my mom’s garage.) |
Just a couple of years later, as a freshman at Harvard University, it
was an honor to have Dr. Purcell teach me electrodynamics. Around that
same time, I also had a summer job and got a chance to work with Dr.
Richard Ernst, who was trying to generalize the work of Bloch and
Purcell on magnetic resonance. He succeeded spectacularly and would
eventually win the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1991 for laying the
foundation for the modern MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) machine.
The MRI machine, in turn, has given us detailed photographs of the
living brain in even finer detail than PET scans.
EMPOWERING THE MIND |
EMPOWERING THE MIND
Eventually I became a professor of theoretical physics, but my
fascination with the mind remained. It is thrilling to see that, just within
the last decade, advances in physics have made possible some of the
feats of mentalism that excited me when I was a child. Using MRI scans,
scientists can now read thoughts circulating in our brains. Scientists can
also insert a chip into the brain of a patient who is totally paralyzed and
connect it to a computer, so that through thought alone that patient can
surf the web, read and write e-mails, play video games, control their
wheelchair, operate household appliances, and manipulate mechanical
arms. In fact, such patients can do anything a normal person can do via
a computer. |
Scientists are now going even further, by connecting the brain directly
to an exoskeleton that these patients can wear around their paralyzed
limbs. Quadriplegics may one day lead near-normal lives. Such
exoskeletons may also give us superpowers enabling us to handle deadly
emergencies. One day, our astronauts may even explore the planets by
mentally controlling mechanical surrogates from the comfort of their
living rooms. |
living rooms.
As in the movie The Matrix, we might one day be able to download
memories and skills using computers. In animal studies, scientists have
already been able to insert memories into the brain. Perhaps it’s only a
matter of time before we, too, can insert artificial memories into our
brains to learn new subjects, vacation in new places, and master new
hobbies. And if technical skills can be downloaded into the minds of
workers and scientists, this may even affect the world economy. We
might even be able to share these memories as well. One day, scientists
might construct an “Internet of the mind,” or a brain-net, where
thoughts and emotions are sent electronically around the world. Even
dreams will be videotaped and then “brain-mailed” across the Internet. |
Technology may also give us the power to enhance our intelligence.
Progress has been made in understanding the extraordinary powers of
“savants” whose mental, artistic, and mathematical abilities are truly
astonishing. Furthermore, the genes that separate us from the apes are
now being sequenced, giving us an unparalleled glimpse into the
evolutionary origins of the brain. Genes have already been isolated in
animals that can increase their memory and mental performance. |
The excitement and promise generated by these eye-opening advances
are so enormous that they have also caught the attention of the
politicians. In fact, brain science has suddenly become the source of a
transatlantic rivalry between the greatest economic powers on the
planet. In January 2013, both President Barack Obama and the European
Union announced what could eventually become multibillion-dollar
funding for two independent projects that would reverse engineer the
brain. Deciphering the intricate neural circuitry of the brain, once
considered hopelessly beyond the scope of modern science, is now the
focus of two crash projects that, like the Human Genome Project, will
change the scientific and medical landscape. Not only will this give us
unparalleled insight into the mind, it will also generate new industries,
spur economic activity, and open up new vistas for neuroscience. |
Once the neural pathways of the brain are finally decoded, one can
envision understanding the precise origins of mental illness, perhaps
leading to a cure for this ancient affliction. This decoding also makes it
possible to create a copy of the brain, which raises philosophical and
ethical questions. Who are we, if our consciousness can be uploaded into
a computer? We can also toy with the concept of immortality. Our
bodies may eventually decay and die, but can our consciousness live
forever?
And beyond that, perhaps one day in the distant future the mind will
be freed of its bodily constraints and roam among the stars, as several
scientists have speculated. Centuries from now, one can imagine placing
our entire neural blueprint on laser beams, which will then be sent into
deep space, perhaps the most convenient way for our consciousness to
explore the stars. |
A brilliant new scientific landscape that will reshape human destiny is
now truly opening up. We are now entering a new golden age of
neuroscience.
In making these predictions, I have had the invaluable assistance of
scientists who graciously allowed me to interview them, broadcast their
ideas on national radio, and even take a TV crew into their laboratories.
These are the scientists who are laying the foundation for the future of
the mind. For their ideas to be incorporated into this book, I made only
two requirements: (1) their predictions must rigorously obey the laws of
physics; and (2) prototypes must exist to show proof-of-principle for
these far-reaching ideas.
TOUCHED BY MENTAL ILLN ESS |
TOUCHED BY MENTAL ILLN ESS
I once wrote a biography of Albert Einstein, called Einstein’s Cosmos, and
had to delve into the minute details of his private life. I had known that
Einstein’s youngest son was afflicted with schizophrenia, but did not
realize the enormous emotional toll that it had taken on the great
scientist’s life. Einstein was also touched by mental illness in another
way; one of his closest colleagues was the physicist Paul Ehrenfest, who
helped Einstein create the theory of general relativity. After suffering
bouts of depression, Ehrenfest tragically killed his own son, who had
Down’s syndrome, and then committed suicide. Over the years, I have
found that many of my colleagues and friends have struggled to manage
mental illness in their families. |
Mental illness has also deeply touched my own life. Several years ago,
my mother died after a long battle with Alzheimer’s disease. It was
heartbreaking to see her gradually lose her memories of her loved ones,
to gaze into her eyes and realize that she did not know who I was. I
could see the glimmer of humanity slowly being extinguished. She had
spent a lifetime struggling to raise a family, and instead of enjoying her
golden years, she was robbed of all the memories she held dear.
As the baby boomers age, the sad experience that I and many others
have had will be repeated across the world. My wish is that rapid
advances in neuroscience will one day alleviate the suffering felt by
those afflicted with mental illness and dementia.
WHAT IS DRIVING THIS REVOLUTION? |
WHAT IS DRIVING THIS REVOLUTION?
The data pouring in from brain scans are now being decoded, and the
progress is stunning. Several times a year, headlines herald a fresh
breakthrough. It took 350 years, since the invention of the telescope, to
enter the space age, but it has taken only fifteen years since the
introduction of the MRI and advanced brain scans to actively connect
the brain to the outside world. Why so quickly , and how much is there to
come? |
Part of this rapid progress has occurred because physicists today have
a good understanding of electromagnetism, which governs the electrical
signals racing through our neurons. The mathematical equations of
James Clerk Maxwell, which are used to calculate the physics of
antennas, radar, radio receivers, and microwave towers, form the very
cornerstone of MRI technology. It took centuries to finally solve the
secret of electromagnetism, but neuroscience can enjoy the fruits of this
grand endeavor. In Book I, I will survey the history of the brain and
explain how a galaxy of new instruments has left the physics labs and
given us glorious color pictures of the mechanics of thought. Because
consciousness plays so central a role in any discussion of the mind, I also
give a physicist’s perspective, offering a definition of consciousness that
includes the animal kingdom as well. In fact, I provide a ranking of
consciousness, showing how it is possible to assign a number to various |
consciousness, showing how it is possible to assign a number to various
types of consciousness. |
But to fully answer the question of how this technology will advance,
we also have to look at Moore’s law, which states that computer power
doubles every two years. I often surprise people with the simple fact that
your cell phone today has more computer power than all of NASA when
it put two men on the moon in 1969. Computers are now powerful
enough to record the electrical signals emanating from the brain and
partially decode them into a familiar digital language. This makes it
possible for the brain to directly interface with computers to control any
object around it. The fast-growing field is called BMI (brain-machine
interface), and the key technology is the computer. In Book II, I’ll
explore this new technology, which has made recording memories, mind
reading, videotaping our dreams, and telekinesis possible. |
In Book III, I’ll investigate alternate forms of consciousness, from
dreams, drugs, and mental illness to robots and even aliens from outer
space. Here we’ll also learn about the potential to control and
manipulate the brain to manage diseases such as depression, Parkinson’s,
Alzheimer’s, and many more. I will also elaborate on the Brain Research
Through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies (or BRAIN) project
announced by President Obama, and the Human Brain Project of the
European Union, which will potentially allocate billions of dollars to
decode the pathways of the brain, all the way down to the neural level.
These two crash programs will undoubtedly open up entirely new
research areas, giving us new ways to treat mental illness and also
revealing the deepest secrets of consciousness. |
After we have given a definition of consciousness, we can use it to
explore nonhuman consciousness as well (i.e., the consciousness of
robots). How advanced can robots become? Can they have emotions?
Will they pose a threat? And we can also explore the consciousness of
aliens, who may have goals totally different from ours.
In the Appendix, I will discuss perhaps the strangest idea in all of
science, the concept from quantum physics that consciousness may be
the fundamental basis for reality.
There is no shortage of proposals for this exploding field. Only time
will tell which ones are mere pipe dreams created by the overheated
imagination of science-fiction writers and which ones represent solid
avenues for future scientific research. Progress in neuroscience has been
astronomical, and in many ways the key has been modern physics,
which uses the full power of the electromagnetic and nuclear forces to
probe the great secrets hidden within our minds. |
I should stress that I am not a neuroscientist. I am a theoretical
physicist with an enduring interest in the mind. I hope that the vantage
point of a physicist can help further enrich our knowledge and give a
fresh new understanding of the most familiar and alien object in the
universe: our mind.
But given the dizzying pace with which radically new perspectives are
being developed, it is important that we have a firm grasp on how the
brain is put together.
So let us first discuss the origins of modern neuroscience, which some
historians believe began when an iron spike sailed through the brain of a
certain Phineas Gage. This seminal event set off a chain reaction that
helped open the brain to serious scientific investigation. Although it was
an unfortunate event for Mr. Gage, it paved the way for modern science.
BOOK I THE MIND AND CONSCIOUSNESS
My fundamental premise about the brain is that its workings— |
BOOK I THE MIND AND CONSCIOUSNESS
My fundamental premise about the brain is that its workings—
what we sometimes call “mind”—are a consequence of its
anatomy and physiology, and nothing more.
—CARL SAGAN
1 UNLOCKING THE MIND
In 1848, Phineas Gage was working as a railroad foreman in Vermont,
when dynamite accidentally went off, propelling a three-foot, seven-inch
spike straight into his face, through the front part of his brain, and out
the top of his skull, eventually landing eighty feet away. His fellow
workers, shocked to see part of their foreman’s brain blown off,
immediately called for a doctor. To the workers’ (and even the doctor’s)
amazement, Mr. Gage did not die on-site. |
He was semiconscious for weeks, but eventually made what seemed
like a full recovery. (A rare photograph of Gage surfaced in 2009,
showing a handsome, confident man, with an injury to his head and left
eye, holding the iron rod.) But after this incident, his coworkers began to
notice a sharp change in his personality. A normally cheerful, helpful
foreman, Gage became abusive, hostile, and selfish. Ladies were warned
to stay clear of him. Dr. John Harlow, the doctor who treated him,
observed that Gage was “capricious and vacillating, devising many plans
of future operations, which are no sooner arranged than they are
abandoned in turn for others appearing more feasible. A child in his
intellectual capacity and manifestations, yet with the animal passions of
a strong man.” Dr. Harlow noted that he was “radically changed” and
that his fellow workers said that “he was no longer Gage.” After Gage’s
death in 1860, Dr. Harlow preserved both his skull and the rod that had |
death in 1860, Dr. Harlow preserved both his skull and the rod that had
smashed into it. Detailed X-ray scans of the skull have since confirmed
that the iron rod caused massive destruction in the area of the brain
behind the forehead known as the frontal lobe, in both the left and right
cerebral hemispheres. |
This incredible accident would not only change the life of Phineas
Gage, it would alter the course of science as well. Previously, the
dominant thinking was that the brain and the soul were two separate
entities, a philosophy called dualism. But it became increasingly clear
that damage to the frontal lobe of his brain had caused abrupt changes
in Gage’s personality. This, in turn, created a paradigm shift in scientific
thinking: perhaps specific areas of the brain could be traced to certain
behaviors.
broca’s brain |
broca’s brain
In 1861, just a year after Gage’s death, this view was further cemented
through the work of Pierre Paul Broca, a physician in Paris who
documented a patient who appeared normal except that he had a severe
speech deficit. The patient could understand and comprehend speech
perfectly, but he could utter only one sound, the word “tan.” After the
patient died, Dr. Broca confirmed during the autopsy that the patient
suffered from a lesion in his left temporal lobe, a region of the brain near
his left ear. Dr. Broca would later confirm twelve similar cases of
patients with damage to this specific area of the brain. Today patients
who have damage to the temporal lobe, usually in the left hemisphere,
are said to suffer from Broca’s aphasia. (In general, patients with this
disorder can understand speech but cannot say anything, or else they
drop many words when speaking.) |
Soon afterward, in 1874, German physician Carl Wernicke described
patients who suffered from the opposite problem. They could articulate
clearly, but they could not understand written or spoken speech. Often
these patients could speak fluently with correct grammar and syntax, but
with nonsensical words and meaningless jargon. Sadly, these patients
often didn’t know they were spouting gibberish. Wernicke confirmed
after performing autopsies that these patients had suffered damage to a
slightly different area of the left temporal lobe.
The works of Broca and Wernicke were landmark studies in
neuroscience, establishing a clear link between behavioral problems,
such as speech and language impairment, and damage to specific regions
of the brain. |
Another breakthrough took place amid the chaos of war. Throughout
history, there were many religious taboos prohibiting the dissection of
the human body, which severely restricted progress in medicine. In
warfare, however, with tens of thousands of bleeding soldiers dying on
the battlefield, it became an urgent mission for doctors to develop any
medical treatment that worked. During the Prusso-Danish War in 1864,
German doctor Gustav Fritsch treated many soldiers with gaping wounds
to the brain and happened to notice that when he touched one
hemisphere of the brain, the opposite side of the body often twitched.
Later Fritsch systematically showed that, when he electrically stimulated
the brain, the left hemisphere controlled the right side of the body, and
vice versa. This was a stunning discovery, demonstrating that the brain
was basically electrical in nature and that a particular region of the
brain controlled a part on the other side of the body. (Curiously, the use |
of electrical probes on the brain was first recorded a couple of thousand
years earlier by the Romans. In the year A.D. 43, records show that the
court doctor to the emperor Claudius used electrically charged torpedo
fish, which were applied to the head of a patient suffering from severe
headaches.)
The realization that there were electrical pathways connecting the
brain to the body wasn’t systematically analyzed until the 1930s, when
Dr. Wilder Penfield began working with epilepsy patients, who often
suffered from debilitating convulsions and seizures that were potentially
life-threatening. For them, the last option was to have brain surgery,
which involved removing parts of the skull and exposing the brain.
(Since the brain has no pain sensors, a person can be conscious during
this entire procedure, so Dr. Penfield used only a local anesthetic during
the operation.) |
Dr. Penfield noticed that when he stimulated certain parts of the
cortex with an electrode, different parts of the body would respond. He
suddenly realized that he could draw a rough one-to-one correspondence
between specific regions of the cortex and the human body. His
drawings were so accurate that they are still used today in almost
unaltered form. They had an immediate impact on both the scientific
community and the general public. In one diagram, you could see which
region of the brain roughly controlled which function, and how
important each function was. For example, because our hands and
mouth are so vital for survival, a considerable amount of brain power is
devoted to controlling them, while the sensors in our back hardly
register at all.
Furthermore, Penfield found that by stimulating parts of the temporal
lobe, his patients suddenly relived long-forgotten memories in a crystal- |
clear fashion. He was shocked when a patient, in the middle of brain
surgery, suddenly blurted out, “It was like ... standing in the doorway at
[my] high school.... I heard my mother talking on the phone, telling my
aunt to come over that night.” Penfield realized that he was tapping into
memories buried deep inside the brain. When he published his results in
1951, they created another transformation in our understanding of the
brain.
Figure 1. This is the map of the motor cortex that was created by Dr. Wilder Penfield, showing which
region of the brain
controls which part of the body, (illustration credit 1.1)
A MAP OF THE BRAIN
By the 1950s and ’60s, it was possible to create a crude map of the brain,
locating different regions and even identifying the functions of a few of
them. |
In Figure 2, we see the neocortex, which is the outer layer of the
brain, divided into four lobes. It is highly developed in humans. All the
lobes of the brain are devoted to processing signals from our senses,
except for one: the frontal lobe, located behind the forehead. The
prefrontal cortex, the foremost part of the frontal lobe, is where most
rational thought is processed. The information you are reading right now
is being processed in your prefrontal cortex. Damage to this area can
impair your ability to plan or contemplate the future, as in the case of
Phineas Gage. This is the region where information from our senses is
evaluated and a future course of action is carried out.
FRONTAL
LOBE
PARIETAL
LOBE
OCCIPITAL
LOBE
TEMPORAL
LOBE
Figure 2. The four lobes of the neocortex of the brain are responsible for different, though related,
functions, (illustration
credit 1.2) |
credit 1.2)
The parietal lobe is located at the top of our brains. The right
hemisphere controls sensory attention and body image; the left
hemisphere controls skilled movements and some aspects of language.
Damage to this area can cause many problems, such as difficulty in
locating parts of your own body.
The occipital lobe is located at the very back of the brain and
processes visual information from the eyes. Damage to this area can
cause blindness and visual impairment.
The temporal lobe controls language (on the left side only), as well as
the visual recognition of faces and certain emotional feelings. Damage to
this lobe can leave us speechless or without the ability to recognize
familiar faces.
THE EVOLVING BRAIN |
THE EVOLVING BRAIN
When you look at other organs of the body, such as our muscles, bones,
and lungs, there seems to be an obvious rhyme and reason to them that
we can immediately see. But the structure of the brain might seem
slapped together in a rather chaotic fashion. In fact, trying to map the
brain has often been called “cartography for fools.” |
To make sense of the seemingly random structure of the brain, in 1967
Dr. Paul MacLean of the National Institute of Mental Health applied
Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution to the brain. He divided the brain
into three parts. (Since then, studies have shown that there are
refinements to this model, but we will use it as a rough organizing
principle to explain the overall structure of the brain.) First, he noticed
that the back and center part of our brains, containing the brain stem,
cerebellum, and basal ganglia, are almost identical to the brains of
reptiles. Known as the “reptilian brain,” these are the oldest structures of
the brain, governing basic animal functions such as balance, breathing,
digestion, heartbeat, and blood pressure. They also control behaviors
such as fighting, hunting, mating, and territoriality, which are necessary
for survival and reproduction. The reptilian brain can be traced back
about 500 million years. (See Figure 3.) |
But as we evolved from reptiles to mammals, the brain also became
more complex, evolving outward and creating entirely new structures.
Here we encounter the “mammalian brain,” or the limbic system, which
is located near the center of the brain, surrounding parts of the reptilian
brain. The limbic system is prominent among animals living in social
groups, such as the apes. It also contains structures that are involved in
emotions. Since the dynamics of social groups can be quite complex, the
limbic system is essential in sorting out potential enemies, allies, and
rivals.
HUMAN
BRAIN
Hypothalamus
MAMMALIAN
L BRAIN .
REPTILIAN
BRAIN
Corpus callosum
Cingulate gyrus
Frontal lobe
Hippocampus
Forn
Cerebellum
Brain stem
Pituitary
gland |
Frontal lobe
Hippocampus
Forn
Cerebellum
Brain stem
Pituitary
gland
Figure 3. The evolutionary history of the brain, with the reptilian brain, the limbic system (the
mammalian brain), and the
neocortex (the human brain). Roughly speaking, one can argue that the path of our brain’s evolution
passed from the
reptilian brain to the mammalian brain to the human brain, (illustration credit 1.3)
The different parts of the limbic system that control behaviors crucial
for social animals are:
• The hippocampus. This is the gateway to memory, where short-term
memories are processed into long-term memories. Its name means
“seahorse,” which describes its strange shape. Damage here will
destroy the ability to make new long-term memories. You are left a
prisoner of the present.
• The amygdala. This is the seat of emotions, especially fear, where
emotions are first registered and generated. Its name means
“almond.” |
• The thalamus. This is like a relay station, gathering sensory signals
from the brain stem and then sending them out to the various
cortices. Its name means “inner chamber.”
• The hypothalamus. This regulates body temperature, our circadian
rhythm, hunger, thirst, and aspects of reproduction and pleasure. It
lies below the thalamus—hence its name.
Finally, we have the third and most recent region of the mammalian
brain, the cerebral cortex, which is the outer layer of the brain. The
latest evolutionary structure within the cerebral cortex is the neocortex
(meaning “new bark”), which governs higher cognitive behavior. It is
most highly developed in humans: it makes up 80 percent of our brain’s
mass, yet is only as thick as a napkin. In rats the neocortex is smooth,
but it is highly convoluted in humans, which allows a large amount of
surface area to be crammed into the human skull. |
In some sense, the human brain is like a museum containing remnants
of all the previous stages in our evolution over millions of years,
exploding outward and forward in size and function. (This is also
roughly the path taken when an infant is born. The infant brain expands
outward and toward the front, perhaps mimicking the stages of our
evolution.)
Although the neocortex seems unassuming, looks are deceiving. Under
a microscope you can appreciate the intricate architecture of the brain.
The gray matter of the brain consists of billions of tiny brain cells called
neurons. Like a gigantic telephone network, they receive messages from
other neurons via dendrites, which are like tendrils sprouting from one
end of the neuron. At the other end of the neuron, there is a long fiber
called the axon. Eventually the axon connects to as many as ten |
thousand other neurons via their dendrites. At the juncture between the
two, there is a tiny gap called the synapse. These synapses act like gates,
regulating the flow of information within the brain. Special chemicals
called neurotransmitters can enter the synapse and alter the flow of
signals. Because neurotransmitters like dopamine, serotonin, and
noradrenaline help control the stream of information moving across the
myriad pathways of the brain, they exert a powerful effect on our
moods, emotions, thoughts, and state of mind. (See Figure 4.)
This description of the brain roughly represented the state of
knowledge through the 1980s. In the 1990s, however, with the
introduction of new technologies from the field of physics, the
mechanics of thought began to be revealed in exquisite detail,
unleashing the current explosion of scientific discovery. One of the
workhorses of this revolution has been the MRI machine. |
Figure 4. Diagram of a neuron. Electrical signals travel along the axon of the neuron until they hit the
synapse.
Neurotransmitters can regulate the flow of electrical signals past the synapse, (illustration credit 1.4)
THE MRI: WINDOW INTO THE BRAIN
To understand the reason why this radical new technology has helped
decode the thinking brain, we have to turn our attention to some basic
principles of physics.
Radio waves, a type of electromagnetic radiation, can pass right
through tissue without doing damage. MRI machines take advantage of
this fact, allowing electromagnetic waves to freely penetrate the skull. In
the process, this technology has given us glorious photographs of
something once thought to be impossible to capture: the inner workings
of the brain as it experiences sensations and emotions. Watching the
dance of lights flickering in a MRI machine, one can trace out the
thoughts moving within the brain. It’s like being able to see the inside of
a clock as it ticks. |
The first thing you notice about an MRI machine is the huge,
cylindrical magnetic coils, which can produce a magnetic field twenty to
sixty thousand times greater than the strength of Earth’s. The giant
magnet is one of the principal reasons why an MRI machine can weigh a
ton, fill up an entire room, and cost several million dollars. (MRI
machines are safer than X-ray machines because they don’t create
harmful ions. CT scans, which can also create 3-D pictures, flood the
body with many times the dosage from an ordinary X-ray, and hence
have to be carefully regulated. By contrast, MRI machines are safe when
used properly. One problem, however, is the carelessness of workers.
The magnetic field is powerful enough to send tools hurling through the
air at high velocity when turned on at the wrong time. People have been
injured and even killed in this way.) |
MRI machines work as follows: Patients lie flat and are inserted into a
cylinder containing two large coils, which create the magnetic field.
When the magnetic field is turned on, the nuclei of the atoms inside your
body act very much like a compass needle: they align horizontally along
the direction of the field. Then a small pulse of radio energy is
generated, which causes some of the nuclei in our body to flip upside
down. When the nuclei later revert back to their normal position, they
emit a secondary pulse of radio energy, which is then analyzed by the
MRI machine. By analyzing these tiny “echoes,” one can then reconstruct
the location and nature of these atoms. Like a bat, which uses echoes to
determine the position of objects in its path, the echoes created by the
MRI machine allow scientists to re-create a remarkable image of the
inside of the brain. Computers then reconstruct the position of the
atoms, giving us beautiful diagrams in three dimensions. |
When MRIs were originally introduced, they were able to show the
static structure of the brain and its various regions. However, in the mid-
1990s, a new type of MRI was invented, called “functional” MRI, or
fMRI, which detected the presence of oxygen in the blood in the brain.
(For different types of MRI machines, scientists sometimes put a
lowercase letter in front of “MRI,” but we will use the abbreviation MRI
to denote all the various types of MRI machines.) MRI scans cannot
directly detect the flow of electricity in the neurons, but since oxygen is
necessary to provide the energy for the neurons, oxygenated blood can
indirectly trace the flow of electrical energy in the neurons and show
how various regions of the brain interact with one another. |
Already these MRI scans have definitively disproven the idea that
thinking is concentrated in a single center. Instead, one can see electrical
energy circulating across different parts of the brain as it thinks. By
tracing the path taken by our thoughts, MRI scans have shed new light
into the nature of Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, schizophrenia, and a host of
other mental diseases.
The great advantage of MRI machines is their exquisite ability to
locate minute parts of the brain, down to a fraction of a millimeter in
size. An MRI scan will create not just dots on a two-dimensional screen,
called pixels, but dots in three-dimensional space, called “voxels,”
yielding a bright collection of tens of thousands of colored dots in 3-D, in
the shape of a brain. |
Since different chemical elements respond to different frequencies of
radio, you can change the frequency of the radio pulse and therefore
identify different elements of the body. As noted, fMRI machines zero in
on the oxygen atom contained within blood in order to measure blood
flow, but MRI machines can also be tuned to identify other atoms. In just
the last decade, a new form of MRI was introduced called “diffusion
tensor imaging” MRI, which detects the flow of water in the brain. Since
water follows the neural pathways of the brain, DTI yields beautiful
pictures that resemble networks of vines growing in a garden. Scientists
can now instantly determine how certain parts of the brain are hooked
up with other parts. |
There are a couple of drawbacks to MRI technology, however.
Although they are unparalleled in spatial resolution, locating voxels
down to the size of a pinpoint in three dimensions, MRIs are not that
good in temporal resolution. It takes almost a full second to follow the
path of blood in the brain, which may not sound like a lot, but
remember that electrical signals travel almost instantly throughout the
brain, and hence MRI scans can miss some of the intricate details of
thought patterns.
Another snag is the cost, which runs in the millions of dollars, so
doctors often have to share the machines. But like most technology,
developments should bring down the cost over time. |
In the meantime, exorbitant costs haven’t stalled the hunt for
commercial applications. One idea is to use MRI scans as lie detectors,
which, according to some studies, can identify lies with 95 percent
accuracy or higher. The level of accuracy is still controversial, but the
basic idea is that when a person tells a lie, he simultaneously has to
know the truth, concoct the lie, and rapidly analyze the consistency of
this lie with previously known facts. Today some companies are claiming
that MRI technology shows that the prefrontal and parietal lobes light up
when someone tells a lie. More specifically, the “orbitofrontal cortex”
(which can serve, among other functions, as the brain’s “fact-checker” to
warn us when something is wrong) becomes active. This area is located
right behind the orbits of our eyes, and hence the name. The theory goes
that the orbitofrontal cortex understands the difference between the
truth and a lie and kicks into overdrive as a result. (Other areas of the |
truth and a lie and kicks into overdrive as a result. (Other areas of the
brain also light up when someone tells a lie, such as the superiormedial
and inferolateral prefrontal cortices, which are involved in cognition.) |
Already there are several commercial firms offering MRI machines as
lie detectors, and cases involving these machines are entering the court
system. But it’s important to note that these MRI scans indicate increased
brain activity only in certain areas. While DNA results can sometimes
have an accuracy of one part in 10 billion or better, MRI scans cannot,
because it takes many areas of the brain to concoct a lie, and these same
areas of the brain are responsible for processing other kinds of thoughts
as well.
EEG SCANS
Another useful tool to probe deep inside the brain is the EEG, the
electroencephalogram. The EEG was introduced all the way back in
1924, but only recently has it been possible to employ computers to
make sense out of all the data pouring in from each electrode.
To use the EEG machine, the patient usually puts on a futuristic-
looking helmet with scores of electrodes on the surface. (More advanced
versions place a hairnet over the head containing a series of tiny |
electrodes.) These electrodes detect the tiny electrical signals that are
circulating in the brain.
(illustration credit 1.5)
Figure 5. At the top, we see an image taken by a functional MRI machine, showing regions of high
mental activity. In the
bottom image, we see the flowerlike pattern created by a diffusion MRI machine, which can follow the
neural pathways
and connections of the brain, (illustration credit 1.5a) |
An EEG scan differs from an MRI scan in several crucial ways. The
MRI scan, as we have seen, shoots radio pulses into the brain and then
analyzes the “echoes” that come back. This means you can vary the
radio pulse to select different atoms for analysis, making it quite
versatile. The EEG machine, however, is strictly passive; that is, it
analyzes the tiny electromagnetic signals the brain naturally emits. The
EEG excels at recording the broad electromagnetic signals that surge
across the entire brain, which allows scientists to measure the overall
activity of the brain as it sleeps, concentrates, relaxes, dreams, etc.
Different states of consciousness vibrate at different frequencies. For
example, deep sleep corresponds to delta waves, which vibrate at .1 to 4
cycles per second. Active mental states, such as problem solving,
correspond to beta waves, vibrating from 12 to 30 cycles per second.
These vibrations allow various parts of the brain to share information |
These vibrations allow various parts of the brain to share information
and communicate with one another, even if they are located on opposite
sides of the brain. And while MRI scans measuring blood flow can be
taken only several times a second, EEG scans measure electrical activity
instantly. |
The greatest advantage of the EEG scan, though, is its convenience
and cost. Even high school students have done experiments in their
living rooms with EEG sensors placed over their heads.
However, the main drawback to the EEG, which has held up its
development for decades, is its very poor spatial resolution. The EEG
picks up electrical signals that have already been diffused after passing
through the skull, making it difficult to detect abnormal activity when it
originates deep in the brain. Looking at the output of the muddled EEG
signals, it is almost impossible to say for sure which part of the brain
created it. Furthermore, slight motions, like moving a finger, can distort
the signal, sometimes rendering it useless.
PET SCANS
Yet another useful tool from the world of physics is the positron
emission topography (PET) scan, which calculates the flow of energy in |
the brain by locating the presence of glucose, the sugar molecule that
fuels cells. Like the cloud chamber I made as a high school student, PET
scans make use of the subatomic particles emitted from sodium-22
within the glucose. To start the PET scan, a special solution containing
slightly radioactive sugar is injected into the patient. The sodium atoms
inside the sugar molecules have been replaced by radioactive sodium-22
atoms. Every time a sodium atom decays, it emits a positive electron, or
positron, which is easily detected by sensors. By following the path of
the radioactive sodium atoms in sugar, one can then trace out the energy
flow within the living brain.
The PET scan shares many of the same advantages of MRI scans but
does not have the fine spatial resolution of an MRI photo. However,
instead of measuring blood flow, which is only an indirect indicator of
energy consumption in the body, PET scans measure energy
consumption, so it is more closely related to neural activity. |
There is another drawback to PET scans, however. Unlike MRI and
EEG scans, PET scans are slightly radioactive, so patients cannot
continually take them. In general, a person is not allowed to have a PET
scan more than once a year because of the risk from radiation.
MAGNETISM IN THE BRAIN
Within the last decade, many new high-tech devices have entered the
tool kit of neuroscientists, including the transcranial electromagnetic
scanner (TES), magnetoencephalography (MEG), near-infrared
spectroscopy (NIRS), and optogenetics, among others. |
In particular, magnetism has been used to systematically shut down
specific parts of the brain without cutting it open. The basic physics
behind these new tools is that a rapidly changing electric field can create
a magnetic field, and vice versa. MEGs passively measure the magnetic
fields produced by the changing electric fields of the brain. These
magnetic fields are weak and extremely tiny, only a billionth of Earth’s
magnetic field. Like the EEG, the MEG is extremely good at time
resolution, down to a thousandth of a second. Its spatial resolution,
however, is only a cubic centimeter.
Unlike the passive measurement of the MEG, the TES generates a large
pulse of electricity, which in turn creates a burst of magnetic energy.
The TES is placed next to the brain, so the magnetic pulse penetrates the
skull and creates yet another electric pulse inside the brain. This
secondary electrical pulse, in turn, is sufficient to turn off or dampen the
activity of selected areas of the brain. |
Historically, scientists had to rely on strokes or tumors to silence
certain parts of the brain and hence determine what they do. But with
the TES, one can harmlessly turn off or dampen parts of the brain at will.
By shooting magnetic energy at a particular spot in the brain, one can
determine its function by simply watching how a person’s behavior has
changed. (For example, by shooting magnetic pulses into the left
temporal lobe, one can see that this adversely affects our ability to talk.) |
One potential drawback of the TES is that these magnetic fields do not
penetrate very far into the interior of the brain (because magnetic fields
decrease much faster than the usual inverse square law for electricity).
TES is quite useful in turning off parts of the brain near the skull, but the
magnetic field cannot reach important centers located deep in the brain,
such as the limbic system. But future generations of TES devices may
overcome this technical problem by increasing the intensity and
precision of the magnetic field.
Wire coil
Pulsed magnetic field
Stimulated
brain region
Positioning
frame
Figure 6. We see the transcranial electromagnetic scanner and the magnetoencephalograph, which uses
magnetism rather
than radio waves to penetrate the skull and determine the nature of thoughts within the brain.
Magnetism can
temporarily silence parts of the brain, allowing scientists to safely determine how these regions perform
without relying |
on stroke victims, (illustration credit 1.6)
DEEP BRAIN STIMULATION
Yet another tool that has proven vital to neurologists is deep brain
stimulation (DBS). The probes originally used by Dr. Penfield were
relatively crude. Today these electrodes can be hairlike and reach
specific areas of the brain deep within its interior. Not only has DBS
allowed scientists to locate the function of various parts of the brain, it
can also be used to treat mental disorders. DBS has already proven its
worth with Parkinson’s disease, in which certain regions of the brain are
overactive and often create uncontrollable shaking of the hands.
More recently, these electrodes have targeted a new area of the brain
(called Brodmann’s area number 25) that is often overactive in
depressed patients who do not respond to psychotherapy or drugs. Deep
brain stimulation has given almost miraculous relief after decades of
torment and agony for these long-suffering patients. |
Every year, new uses for deep brain stimulation are being found. In
fact, nearly all the major disorders of the brain are being reexamined in
light of this and other new brain-scanning technologies. This promises to
be an exciting new area for diagnosing and even treating illnesses.
OPTOGENETICS—LIGHTING UP THE BRAIN
But perhaps the newest and most exciting instrument in the neurologist’s
tool kit is optogenetics, which was once considered science fiction. Like
a magic wand, it allows you to activate certain pathways controlling
behavior by shining a light beam on the brain.
Incredibly, a light-sensitive gene that causes a cell to fire can be
inserted, with surgical precision, directly into a neuron. Then, by turning
on a light beam, the neuron is activated. More importantly, this allows
scientists to excite these pathways, so that you can turn on and off
certain behaviors by flicking a switch. |
Although this technology is only a decade old, optogenetics has
already proven successful in controlling certain animal behaviors. By
turning on a light switch, it is possible to make fruit flies suddenly fly
off, worms stop wiggling, and mice run around madly in circles. Monkey
trials are now beginning, and even human trials are in discussion. There
is great hope that this technology will have a direct application in
treating disorders like Parkinson’s and depression.
THE TRANSPARENT BRAIN
Like optogenetics, another spectacular new development is making the
brain fully transparent so that its neural pathways are exposed to the
naked eye. In 2013, scientists at Stanford University announced that
they had successfully made the entire brain of a mouse transparent, as
well as parts of a human brain. The announcement was so stunning that
it made the front page of the New York Times, with the headline “Brain
as Clear as Jell-0 for Scientists to Explore.” |
At the cellular level, cells seen individually are transparent, with all
their microscopic components fully exposed. However, once billions of
cells come together to form organs like the brain, the addition of lipids
(fats, oils, waxes, and chemicals not soluble in water) helps make the
organ opaque. The key to the new technique is to remove the lipids
while keeping the neurons intact. The scientists at Stanford did this by
placing the brain in hydrogel (a gel-like substance mainly made of
water), which binds to all the brain’s molecules except the lipids. By
placing the brain in a soapy solution with an electric field, the solution
can be flushed out of the brain, carrying along the lipids, leaving the
brain transparent. The addition of dyes can then make the neural
pathways visible. This will help to identify and map the many neural
pathways of the brain. |
Making tissue transparent is not new, but getting precisely the right
conditions necessary to make the entire brain transparent took a lot of
ingenuity. “I burned and melted more than a hundred brains,” confessed
Dr. Kwanghun Chung, one of the lead scientists in the study. The new
technique, called Clarity, can also be applied to other organs (and even
organs preserved years ago in chemicals like formalin). He has already
created transparent livers, lungs, and hearts. This new technique has
startling applications across all of medicine. In particular, it will
accelerate locating the neural pathways of the brain, which is the focus
of intense research and funding.
FOUR FUNDAMENTAL FORCES |
FOUR FUNDAMENTAL FORCES
The success of this first generation of brain scans has been nothing less
than spectacular. Before their introduction, only about thirty or so
regions of the brain were known with any certainty. Now the MRI
machine alone can identify two to three hundred regions of the brain,
opening up entirely new frontiers for brain science. With so many new
scanning technologies being introduced from physics just within the last
fifteen years, one might wonder: Are there more? The answer is yes, but
they will be variations and refinements of the previous ones, not
radically new technologies. This is because there are only four
fundamental forces—gravitational, electromagnetic, weak nuclear, and
strong nuclear—that rule the universe. (Physicists have tried to find
evidence for a fifth force, but so far all such attempts have failed.) |
The electromagnetic force, which lights up our cities and represents
the energy of electricity and magnetism, is the source of almost all the
new scanning technologies (with the exception of the PET scan, which is
governed by the weak nuclear force). Because physicists have had over
150 years of experience working with the electromagnetic force, there is
no mystery in creating new electric and magnetic fields, so any new
brain-scanning technology will most likely be a novel modification of
existing technologies, rather than being something entirely new. As with
most technology, the size and cost of these machines will drop, vastly
increasing the widespread use of these sophisticated instruments.
Already physicists are doing the basic calculations necessary to make an
MRI machine fit into a cell phone. At the same time, the fundamental
challenge facing these brain scans is resolution, both spatial and
temporal. The spatial resolution of MRI scans will increase as the |
temporal. The spatial resolution of MRI scans will increase as the
magnetic field becomes more uniform and as the electronics become
more sensitive. At present, MRI scans can see only dots or voxels within
a fraction of a millimeter. But each dot may contain hundreds of
thousands of neurons. New scanning technology should reduce this even
further. The holy grail of this approach would be to create an MRI-like
machine that could identify individual neurons and their connections. |
The temporal resolution of MRI machines is also limited because they
analyze the flow of oxygenated blood in the brain. The machine itself
has very good temporal resolution, but tracing the flow of blood slows it
down. In the future, other MRI machines will be able to locate different
substances that are more directly connected to the firing of neurons,
thereby allowing real-time analysis of mental processes. No matter how
spectacular the successes of the past fifteen years, then, they were just a
taste of the future.
NEW MODELS OF THE BRAIN
Historically, with each new scientific discovery, a new model of the
brain has emerged. One of the earliest models of the brain was the
“homunculus,” a little man who lived inside the brain and made all the
decisions. This picture was not very helpful, since it did not explain what
was happening in the brain of the homunculus. Perhaps there was a
homunculus hiding inside the homunculus. |
With the arrival of simple mechanical devices, another model of the
brain was proposed: that of a machine, such as a clock, with mechanical
wheels and gears. This analogy was useful for scientists and inventors
like Leonardo da Vinci, who actually designed a mechanical man. |
During the late 1800s, when steam power was carving out new
empires, another analogy emerged, that of a steam engine, with flows of
energy competing with one another. This hydraulic model, historians
have conjectured, affected Sigmund Freud’s picture of the brain, in
which there was a continual struggle between three forces: the ego
(representing the self and rational thought), the id (representing
repressed desires), and the superego (representing our conscience). In
this model, if too much pressure built up because of a conflict among
these three, there could be a regression or general breakdown of the
entire system. This model was ingenious, but as even Freud himself
admitted, it required detailed studies of the brain at the neuronal level,
which would take another century. |
Early in the last century, with the rise of the telephone, another
analogy surfaced—that of a giant switchboard. The brain was a mesh of
telephone lines connected into a vast network. Consciousness was a long
row of telephone operators sitting in front of a large panel of switches,
constantly plugging and unplugging wires. Unfortunately, this model
said nothing about how these messages were wired together to form the
brain.
With the rise of the transistor, yet another model became fashionable:
the computer. The old-fashioned switching stations were replaced by
microchips containing hundreds of millions of transistors. Perhaps the
“mind” was just a software program running on “wetware” (i.e., brain
tissue rather than transistors). This model is an enduring one, even
today, but it has limitations. The transistor model cannot explain how
the brain performs computations that would require a computer the size
of New York City. Plus the brain has no programming, no Windows |
operating system or Pentium chip. (Also, a PC with a Pentium chip is
extremely fast, but it has a bottleneck. All calculations must pass
through this single processor. The brain is the opposite. The firing of
each neuron is relatively slow, but it more than makes up for this by
having 100 billion neurons processing data simultaneously. Therefore a
slow parallel processor can trump a very fast single processor.)
The most recent analogy is that of the Internet, which lashes together
billions of computers. Consciousness, in this picture, is an “emergent”
phenomenon, miraculously arising out of the collective action of billions
of neurons. (The problem with this picture is that it says absolutely
nothing about how this miracle occurs. It brushes all the complexity of
the brain under the rug of chaos theory.) |
End of preview. Expand
in Dataset Viewer.
README.md exists but content is empty.
- Downloads last month
- 66