A variation in a part of the brain
may explain why some people have a better memory of reality than others
and could advance understanding of brain disorders like schizophrenia, scientists said.
In a study published in the Journal of
Neuroscience, researchers from Cambridge University tested 53 volunteers
and found differences in their ability to distinguish between real or
imagined memories.
The scientists
then found a direct link between these results and the size of a
specific area of the brain called the paracingulate sulcus, or PCS.
The PCS is one of the last regions of the
brain to develop before birth, and the study found that people with a
larger PCS were better at discerning real experiences from imagined
ones.
"The memory differences we observed were
quite striking. It is exciting to think that these individual
differences in ability might have a basis in a simple brain folding
variation," said Cambridge's Jon Simons, who led the research.
The findings may also help scientists
understand more about schizophrenia, he said, because an inability to
recognize what is real and what isn't is a hallmark of the disease.
"Hallucinations are often reported whereby,
for example, someone hears a voice when nobody's there. Difficulty
distinguishing real from imagined information might be an explanation
for such hallucinations," Simons said. "The person might imagine the
voice but misattribute it as coming from the outside world."
Schizophrenia is a severe mental disorder which affects 24 million people worldwide, according to World Health Organization data, yet relatively little is known of its causes.
Schizophrenia is a severe mental disorder which affects 24 million people worldwide, according to World Health Organization data, yet relatively little is known of its causes.
"We've found evidence that suggests this
particular (brain)region might be reduced in people with schizophrenia,
and that this could be the beginning of an explanation for why these
people experience hallucinations," Simons said in a telephone interview.
The 53 volunteers in the study first had
brain scans which showed whether they had either a clear presence or
absence of PCS in the left or right brain.
The researchers then showed them well-known
word pairs -- such as "Laurel and Hardy" for example -- which were
sometimes complete and sometimes had the second word blanked out.
The volunteers were then asked to remember
whether they had seen a completed pair, or whether they had completed
the pair in their own mind.
"What we're interested in linking next. is
whether individuals with schizophrenia who also have that reduction in
the PCS are definitely more likely to experience hallucinations," Simons
said, adding that his team is planning further research in the coming
months.
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