Lula enganou os cientistas por mais de 50 anos

segunda-feira, setembro 14, 2009

Calma gente, não é o nosso presidente Lula, mas o animal lula! Gente, se uma lula pode enganar os cientistas por mais de cinco décadas, hum, num sei não se em outras coisas que eles arrotam certezas absolutas e dogmáticas se eles num tão errados, sô!

+++++

Brain Scientists Misled By Squid
by JON HAMILTON

September 11, 2009

For more than 50 years, scientists who study the brain have been misled by squid. They did experiments on squid nerve cells thinking that those cells were good models for the human nervous system. Now a team of scientists in Germany says the squid may not be such a good model after all.

Signals Seen With Naked Eye

Squid were long favorites of neuroscientists because their brains send messages along nerve fibers, called axons, that are so big you can see them with the naked eye.



One conclusion they drew from early squid experiments is that it takes a lot of energy for a nerve cell to send out a message, and scientists assumed the same was true of people.

But researcher Henrik Alle at the Max-Planck Institute in Frankfurt doesn't buy that.

"I saw this old work," says Alle. "I thought I cannot believe personally that nature would waste such energy."

Alle figured that nature would have made the process more efficient in mammals, whose brains send a huge number of messages.

Humans More Efficient Than Squid

When Alle and his team measured precisely how much energy was consumed by the axons in rats, they found that rat axons use only a third as much energy as squid axons. That probably means humans are equally efficient. They report their results in the journal Science.

But does the finding really matter?

Pierre Magistretti, from the Brain Mind Institute in Lausanne, Switzerland, says it does. One reason has to do with our use of fMRI and PET scans, which show the brain at work.

"What you see with an fMRI or PET scan is the amount of energy that a given brain region is consuming to carry out a certain function," says Magistretti.

To fully understand what those scans mean, you have to know precisely where the energy is going. And scientists were misled by the squid model, which assumes most of the energy for brain communication is consumed by the brain cell sending a message.

...

Read more here/Leia mais aqui.