- State banquet: Menu will be heavy on veggies, low on red meat
- Economic reforms will continue in India, says Manmohan Singh
- American business' role vital to Indo-US strategic partnership: PM
- Indian economy to reach nine percent within two years: Manmohan Singh
- India, US to sign MoU on energy security and climate change
- Allowing foreign investment to private defence suppliers will benefit US, India: PM
Brain region that makes you braver identified
Washington, July 10 (ANI): The next time you feel anxious or scared don't run to mom or pal for help, for your brain is more than enough to control the sense of fear, says a new study, which has found specials cells in the brain that allow animals to overcome the 'scary' feelings.
According to scientists, the results can lead to new drugs for helping people with anxiety-related conditions such as post-traumatic stress disorder.
-
E-mail Article
Printer Friendly
Text-Size

Using a technique that selectively eliminates brain cells, neuroscientist Denis Pare and colleagues have revealed that cells called intercalated (ITC) neurons are crucial for overcoming fear.
"The available data indicates that one does not unlearn fear but instead learns not to fear the threatening stimulus in particular contexts," National Geographic News quoted Pare, of Rutgers University in New Jersey, as saying.
The research team demonstrated the importance of ITC neurons by training rats wandering free in cages to associate a certain sound with a mild electric shock to their feet.
This conditioning taught the rats to be afraid of the sound, and they would freeze in place for a few seconds whenever they heard it.
Next the researchers presented the tone without the shock so the rats had memories of hearing the sound without cause for fear.
The following day the team used a targeted drug to render ITC neurons useless in half of the trained rats.
When presented with the tone a week later, rats with intact ITC neurons remembered that the sound no longer signaled an impending shock and continued to act normally.
The animals missing ITC neurons, however, remained afraid of the tone. They froze whenever they heard it, anxiously anticipating a jolt that never came.
The findings support the theory that ITC cells play an important role in forming and expressing so-called extinction memories-remembered moments of safety that help overcome fear.
The research is detailed today in the online edition of the journal Nature. (ANI)
Brain Drain no more a loss of human capital: UN report.
Brain's reward chemical dopamine induces both desire and dread.
Brain implant helps restore speech in 'almost totally paralysed man'.
Brain region that makes you braver identified.
Brain's 'reward system' may spur obesity.



