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by Staff Writers Cambridge, UK (SPX) Oct 23, 2014
This study uncovers hidden signatures of brain networks that could support consciousness in patients who are unresponsive and seemingly vegetative, but who demonstrate signs of covert awareness. University of Cambridge researchers Dr Srivas Chennu, Dr Tristan Bekinschtein and their collaborators employ the science of networks to characterise the brain networks that support human consciousness and how they are affected in pathological states of low awareness, like the vegetative state. In a study publishing this week in PLOS Computational Biology, the authors analyse brain networks in 32 patients diagnosed as vegetative and minimally conscious, measured with electroencephalography, and compare them to healthy adults. They show that the rich and diversely connected networks that support awareness in the healthy brain are characteristically impaired in patients. However, some unresponsive vegetative patients (who show signs of hidden awareness by following commands like imagining playing tennis) have well-preserved brain networks that look similar to those of healthy adults. Identifying the neural signatures of consciousness remains an elusive yet fascinating challenge to current cognitive neuroscience, but it takes on an immediate clinical and societal significance in patients diagnosed as vegetative and minimally conscious. This research could improve clinical assessment and help identify patients who might be covertly aware despite being uncommunicative. The researchers say: "Being able to detect the recovery of brain networks in patients, alongside or even before they show behavioural signs of improvement, is very promising. However, further work is essential to translate these scientific advances into viable tools that can be reliably used at the patients' bedsides to accurately inform and guide their clinical care." Chennu S, Finoia P, Kamau E, Allanson J, Williams GB, et al. (2014) Spectral Signatures of Reorganised Brain Networks in Disorders of Consciousness. PLoS Comput Biol 10(10): e1003887. doi:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003887
Related Links University of Cambridge All About Human Beings and How We Got To Be Here
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