New research challenges traditional views of how the brain makes decisions, suggesting that even its earliest regions play a more active and dynamic role than previously thought.
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and Huntington disease (HD) are lethal neurodegenerative diseases affecting motor function. Though their etiology and pathology are distinct, recent evidence suggests commonalities between TAR DNA-binding protein (TDP-43), which is associated with 97% of ALS cases, and huntingtin (HTT), the causative protein of HD. ALS is a heterogeneous, lethal neurodegenerative disease characterized by the progressive loss of upper and lower motor neurons, as well as brainstem and spinal cord degeneration. The causes of ALS are complex, variable, and, in some cases, unknown, but most cases involve mislocalization of the protein TDP-43. In contrast, HD is a monogenic, autosomal dominant, lethal neurodegenerative disease caused by polyglutamine expansion in HTT protein and characterized by the progressive loss of neurons in the brain, particularly in the striatum, which results in motor, cognitive, and behavioral changes. Although HD is not typically associated with motor neuron loss, recent evidence suggests a link between HTT and TDP-43 within the context of both ALS and HD, as well as links to related neurodegenerative diseases, such as frontotemporal dementia (FTD) and spinocerebellar ataxia type 2 (SCA2). Herein, we discuss confirmed cases of concurrent ALS and HD and the overlap of underlying disease mechanisms that potentially contribute to the onset and progression of these two devastating neurodegenerative diseases, with a focus on commonalities between TDP-43 and HTT. We propose that elucidating these commonalities will aid in the identification of broad-spectrum disease risk factors and potential overlapping treatment targets.
Abstract: Understanding how populations of neurons represent information is a central challenge across machine learning and neuroscience. Recent work in both fields has begun to characterize the representational geometry and functionality underlying complex distributed activity. For example, artificial neural networks trained on data with more features than neurons compress data by representing features non-orthogonally in so-called *superposition*. However, the effect of time (or memory), an additional capacity-constraining pressure, on underlying representational geometry in recurrent models is not well understood. Here, we study how memory demands affect representational geometry in recurrent neural networks (RNNs), introducing the concept of temporal superposition. We develop a theoretical framework in RNNs with linear recurrence trained on a delayed serial recall task to better understand how properties of the data, task demands, and network dimensionality lead to different representational strategies, and show that these insights generalize to nonlinear RNNs. Through this, we identify an effectively linear, dense regime and a sparse regime where RNNs utilize an interference-free space, characterized by a phase transition in the angular distribution of features and decrease in spectral radius. Finally, we analyze the interaction of spatial and temporal superposition to observe how RNNs mediate different representational tradeoffs. Overall, our work offers a mechanistic, geometric explanation of representational strategies RNNs learn, how they depend on capacity and task demands, and why.
Supplementary Material: zip
Primary Area: interpretability and explainable AI.
We already know that moving your body is important for brain health, but a new study reveals a possible reason why: It could be triggering a kind of hydraulic pump that flushes out fluid in the brain.
By studying mice and conducting simulations, researchers at the Pennsylvania State University (Penn State) have found that movements in the abdominal muscles can ripple all the way up to the brain, potentially cleaning out waste materials that build up during the day.
It’s tangible evidence that what goes on in our brains and our bodies isn’t so separate after all, and a good reminder to get that body moving, in whatever way works for you, throughout the day.
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My name is Artem, I’m a neuroscience PhD student at Harvard University.
🌎 Website and Social links: https://kirsanov.ai/
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A lightning fast catchup on the latest in foundational physics theories, in light of recent news conserning UAP, NHI, and psionics
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We tend to imagine there are connectings between things that we don’t understand. Quantum mechanics and consciousness, aliens and pyramids, black holes and dark matter, dark matter and dark energy, dark energy and black holes. Usually there’s no real relationship whatsoever, but this last pair—black holes and dark energy being the same thing—has received some recent hype in the press. Let’s see if it might actually be true.
Episodes referenced companion playlist: • what if black hole ARE dark energy? | comp…
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The Big Why explores the cutting edge of science and technology: Artificial Brains! 🧠🤖 In this mind-blowing video, we dive into the quest to replicate the human brain’s complexity and power in a machine.
Discover the various approaches scientists are taking, from simulating neural networks to building brain-like hardware. We’ll examine the potential of this technology to revolutionize medicine, robotics, and even our understanding of consciousness.
But we won’t shy away from the big questions either: Could artificial brains surpass human intelligence? What are the ethical implications of creating conscious machines? Join us as we ponder the future of AI and the potential for a technological singularity.
#ArtificialBrain #AI #Neuroscience #Robotics #FutureTech #Consciousness #Singularity #thebigwhy
00:00 — Intro
01:33 — Overview
03:39 — Approaches to Brain Simulation
06:02 — Artificial Brain Thought Experiment
07:40 — Outro.
Artificial Neurons That Talk to the Brain? A Major Breakthrough in Neurotechnology
What if machines could communicate directly with your brain?
Scientists at Northwestern University have developed *printed artificial neurons* that can interact with real brain cells—sending signals that closely mimic natural neural activity. This breakthrough could redefine how we treat neurological disorders and build the next generation of energy-efficient AI systems.
In this video, we explore how these artificial neurons work, how they were tested on real brain tissue, and why this discovery could lead to revolutionary technologies like brain-machine interfaces and neuromorphic computing.
🔬 *What you’ll learn:*
How artificial neurons mimic real brain signals
Why traditional computing struggles with energy efficiency
The role of advanced materials like graphene and MoS₂
How this technology could restore vision, hearing, or movement
What neuromorphic computing means for the future of AI
🚀 *Why this matters:*
#HumanBehavior.
This Video is For Educational Purpose Only… It doesn’t have to be true in anyway. Everything is based on ones opinions and not a false narration.
This video examines the psychological factors behind strong political loyalty, using support for Trump as a case study. Based on findings from behavioral science and social psychology, it explores why some people continue to defend beliefs even when faced with opposing evidence.
Topics covered include cognitive dissonance, identity-protective thinking, and social dominance orientation—concepts that help explain how people process information, protect group identity, and remain committed to a political worldview.
This is not a partisan attack or political endorsement. It is an exploration of human behavior, showing how emotion, identity, and perception often shape decisions more powerfully than facts alone.
If you want to better understand why changing minds is so difficult in politics, this video provides a thoughtful, research-informed perspective.