Bigger brain may not make you smarter : The Tribune India

Join Whatsapp Channel

Bigger brain may not make you smarter

LONDON: There is an “ideal” brain circuit size suited to carrying out particular tasks, a study has found.

Bigger brain may not make you smarter

Adding neurons and connections to a brain can help learning—up to a point. Thinkstock



LONDON: There is an “ideal” brain circuit size suited to carrying out particular tasks, a study has found.

Researchers from the University of Cambridge in the UK found increasing the size of neural circuits in the brain can boost learning performance.

However, this increased connectivity also has the potential to impede learning, they said.

The study, published in the journal PNAS, looked at how neural circuits can use additional connectivity to achieve faster and more precise learning.

It showed that adding apparently “redundant” neurons—cells that make brain work—and synaptic connections, that enable information to flow from one neuron to another, to a network is a double-edged sword.

On the one hand, an increase in connectivity can make a task easier to learn.

On the other hand, due to inherent noisiness in signal-carrying connections, increased connectivity will eventually hinder both learning and task performance once a circuit exceeds a certain size.

The findings suggest a new potential reason why excessive numbers of noisy connections can lead to learning disorders that are associated with brain hyperconnectivity, including some developmental forms of autism.

“Our research shows that adding ‘spare’ or redundant connections to brain circuits can, in fact, boost learning performance,” said Timothy O’Leary, Lecturer at Cambridge, who led the study.

“These additional connections—which don’t appear strictly necessary for brain function—can make a new task easier to learn,” O’Leary said.

“However, we found that if each new pathway adds ‘noise’ to the signal it transmits, the overall gain in learning performance will eventually be lost as a circuit increases in size.

“We can predict, therefore, that there is a so-called ‘sweet spot,’ an ideal brain circuit size that suits a particular task,” O’Leary said.

While evidence points to the fact that larger brains tend to be found in species with higher cognitive function and learning ability, brain circuit size may ultimately be constrained by the need to learn efficiently with unreliable synapses, researchers said.

Adding neurons and connections to a brain can help learning—up to a point.

After that, an increase in size could actually impair learning, they said. PTI

Top News

EC seeks BJP's response on Opposition charge of PM Modi violating model code

Election Commission sends notices to PM Modi, Rahul, Kharge over violation of Model Code of Conduct

ECI invokes Section 77 of Representation of People Act, hold...

Deeply biased: MEA on US report citing human rights violations in India

Deeply biased: MEA on US report citing human rights violations in India

The annual report of the State Department highlights instanc...

BSP announces candidates for Fatehgarh Sahib, Bathinda Lok Sabha seats in Punjab

BSP announces candidates for Fatehgarh Sahib, Bathinda Lok Sabha seats in Punjab

The party fields Kulwant Singh Mehto from Fatehgarh Sahib an...

Saurabh Bharadwaj alleges conspiracy to halt Delhi mayoral polls, oust AAP from MCD

Saurabh Bharadwaj alleges conspiracy to halt Delhi mayoral polls, oust AAP from MCD

The minister also accuses Chief Secretary Naresh Kumar of fl...


Cities

View All