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发表于 2010-1-20 08:25:10 |只看该作者 |倒序浏览
本帖最后由 prettywraith 于 2010-1-20 08:30 编辑

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From the January 2010 Scientific American Magazine


Using Light and Genes to Probe the Brain


Optogenetics emerges as a potent tool to study the brain's inner workings


By Gary Stix   


In 1979 Francis Crick, famed co-discoverer of DNA’s structure, published an article in Scientific American that set out a wish list of techniques needed to fundamentally improve understanding of the way the brain processes information. High on his wish list was a method of gaining control over specific classes of neurons while, he wrote, “leaving the others more or less unaltered.”


Over the past few years Crick’s vision for targeting neurons has begun to materialize thanks to a sophisticated combination of fiber optics and genetic engineering. The advent of what is known as optogenetics has even captured popular attention because of its ability to alter animal behavior—one research group demonstrated how light piped into a mouse’s brain can drive it to turn endlessly in circles. Such feats have inspired much public comment, including a joke made by comedian Jay Leno in 2006 about the prospect for an optogenetically controlled fly pestering George W. Bush.


Controlling a subordinate or a spouse with a souped-up laser pointer may be essential for science-fiction dystopia and late-night humor, but in reality optogenetics has emerged as the most important new technology for providing insight into the numbingly complex circuitry of the mammalian brain. It has already furnished clues as to how neural miswiring underlies neurological and mental disorders, including Parkinson’s disease and schizophrenia.


A seminal event that sparked widespread neuroscience interest came in 2005, when Karl Deisseroth and his colleagues at Stanford University and at the Max Planck Institute for Biophysics in Frankfurt demonstrated how a virus could be used to deliver a light-sensitive gene called channelrhodopsin-2 into specific sets of mammalian neurons. Once equipped with the gene (taken from pond algae), the neurons fired when exposed to light pulses. A box on Crick’s list could be checked off: this experiment and ones that were soon to follow showed how it would be possible to trigger or extinguish selected neurons, and not their neighbors, in just a few milliseconds, the speed at which they normally fire. Hundreds of laboratories worldwide have since adopted Deisseroth’s technique.


A 38-year-old psychiatrist by training who still sees patients once a week, Deisseroth entered the field of bioengineering because of his frustration over the inadequate tools available to research and treat mental illness and neurodegenerative disorders. “I have conducted many brain-stimulation treatments in psychiatry that suffered greatly from a lack of precision. You can stimulate certain cells that you want to target, but you also stimulate all of the wrong cells as well,” he says. Instead of just observing the effects from a drug or an implanted electrode, optogenetics brings researchers closer to the fundamental causes of a behavior.


Since 2005 Deisseroth’s laboratory—at times in collaboration with leading neuroscience groups—has assembled a powerful tool kit based on channelrhodopsin-2 and other so-called opsins. By adjusting the opening or closing of channels in cell membranes, opsins can switch neurons on or turn them off. Molecular legerdemain can also manipulate just a subset of one type of neuron or control a circuit between groups of selected neurons in, say, the limbic system and others in the cortex. Deisseroth has also refined methods for delivering the opsin genes, typically by inserting into a virus both opsin genes and DNA to turn on those genes.


To activate the opsins, Deisseroth’s lab has attached laser diodes to tiny fiber-optic cables that reach the brain’s innermost structures. Along with the optical fibers, electrodes are implanted that record when neurons fire. “In the past year what’s happened is that these techniques have gone from being something interesting and useful in limited applications to something generalizable to any cell or question in biology,” Deisseroth says.



Most compelling, however, are experiments that have demonstrated te relevance of optogenetics to both basic science and medicine. At the Society for Neuroscience meeting in Chicago last October, Michael Häusser of University College London reported on an optogenetics experiment that showed how 100 neurons could trigger a memory stored in a much larger ensemble of about 100,000 neurons, suggesting how the technique may be used to understand memory formation.


Last spring Deisseroth’s group published an optogenetics study that helped to elucidate the workings of deep-brain stimulation, which uses electrodes implanted deep in the brain to alleviate the abnormal movements of Parkinson’s disease. The experiment called into question the leading theory of how the technology works—activation of an area called the subthalamic nucleus. Instead the electrodes appear to exert their effects on nerve fibers that reach the subthalamic nucleus from the motor cortex and perhaps other areas. The finding has already led to a better understanding of how to deploy deep-brain electrodes. Given its fine-tuned specificity, optoelectronics might eventually replace deep-brain stimulation.



Although optogenetic control of human behavior may be years away, Deisseroth comments that the longer-range implications of the technology must be considered: “I’m not writing ethics papers, but I think about these issues every day, what it might mean to gain understanding and control over what is a desire, what is a need, what is hope.”


Note: this story was originally printed with the title "A Light in the Brain"



链接:http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=a-light-in-the-brain

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发表于 2010-1-20 10:06:34 |只看该作者
本帖最后由 splendidsun 于 2010-1-20 10:54 编辑

赞~今天好早~

1-20
Comment
Today's topic is very interesting and cutting-edged. I like it very much because I could grasp all points that the author wants to demonstrate. Ha~~
In the field of biology and basic medical science, the main barrier that limits the development of science research is how to focus on specific targets. Without specificity, it is difficult to know the interaction among molecular and the pathways of signal transduction which are very essential to explain the mechanisms that different organs work together. Also specific targets have the same vital roles in the clinical therapy. Chemotherapy and radiotherapy to tumors have very low capacities to choose the tumor cell. In this way, not only tumor cells could be killed by the chemical toxin or radiation but also normal cells would be hurt in this process. After balancing the benefit and the injury that chemotherapy and radiotherapy bring, the patients have to suffer the side effects of them in order to survive. In this article, the author highlights a new method to target a group of specific neurons by transforming the virus that could fire into the brain neurons. The light signals could be traced and recorded which offer the original resources of neural activities. This great breakthrough gives a hint for neurobiologists to understand the brain activities and diseases. Maybe someday this type of virus could be apply in the clinical testing just like the tracer in PET. However, it is still a long way to arrive that stage because this issue is closely related with medical ethics. And control of viruses is another problem scientists should resolve before it is applied in public.


错字:
Contol—Control
Pulic—Public

optogenetics光遗传学
dystopia糟透的社会
numbingly使麻木的,失去知觉
schizophrenia精神分裂症
extinguish压制,熄灭
check off核查无误做上记号
legerdemain戏法,骗术
manipluate操纵,处理
limbic system 边缘系统
laser diodes激光二极管
fine-tuned 调整,微调

好句
1.
Over the past few years Crick’s vision for targeting neurons has begun to materialize thanks to a sophisticated combination of fiber optics and genetic engineering.

阳光,微笑,我喜欢~~

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发表于 2010-1-20 11:33:25 |只看该作者
Using Light and Genes to Probe the Brain
Optogenetics emerges as a potent tool to study the brain's inner workings
By Gary Stix
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=a-light-in-the-brain

In 1979 Francis Crick, famed co-discoverer of DNA’s structure, published an article in Scientific American that set out a wish list of techniques needed to fundamentally improve understanding of the way the brain processes information. High on his wish list was a method of gaining control over specific classes of neurons while, he wrote, “leaving the others more or less unaltered.”

Over the past few years Crick’s vision for targeting neurons has begun to materialize thanks to a sophisticateda.老练的;精密的,尖端的;】 combination of fiber optics and genetic engineering. The advent of what is known as optogenetics has even captured popular attention because of its ability to alter animal behavior—one research group demonstrated how light piped intoin pipes 用管道输送】 a mouse’s brain can drive it to turn endlessly in circles. Such feats have inspired much public comment, including a joke made by comedian Jay Leno in 2006 about the prospect for an optogenetically controlled fly pestering George W. Bush.

Controlling a subordinate or a spouse with a souped-up laser pointer may be essential for science-fiction dystopia and late-night humor, but in reality optogenetics has emerged as the most important new technology for providing insight into the numbingly complex circuitry of the mammalian brain. It has already furnished clues as to how neural miswiring underlies neurological and mental disorders, including Parkinson’s disease and schizophrenia.

A seminalSeminal is used to describe things such as books, works, events, and experiences that have a great influence in a particular field. (FORMAL) event that sparked widespread neuroscience interest came in 2005, when Karl Deisseroth and his colleagues at Stanford University and at the Max Planck Institute for Biophysics in Frankfurt demonstrated how a virus could be used to deliver a light-sensitive gene called channelrhodopsin-2 into specific sets of mammalian neurons. Once equipped with the gene (taken from pond algae), the neurons fired when exposed to light pulses. A box on Crick’s list could be checked off: this experiment and ones that were soon to follow showed how it would be possible to trigger or extinguish selected neurons, and not their neighbors, in just a few milliseconds, the speed at which they normally fire. Hundreds of laboratories worldwide have since adopted Deisseroth’s technique.
A 38-year-old psychiatrist by training who still sees patients once a week, Deisseroth entered the field of bioengineering because of his frustration over the inadequate tools available to research and treat mental illness and neurodegenerative disorders. “I have conducted many brain-stimulation treatments in psychiatry that suffered greatly from a lack of precision. You can stimulate certain cells that you want to target, but you also stimulate all of the wrong cells as well,” he says. Instead of just observing the effects from a drug or an implanted electrode, optogenetics brings researchers closer to the fundamental causes of a behavior.

Since 2005 Deisseroth’s laboratory—at times in collaboration with leading neuroscience groups—has assembled a powerful tool kit based on channelrhodopsin-2 and other so-called opsins. By adjusting the opening or closing of channels in cell membranes, opsins can switch neurons on or turn them off. Molecular legerdemain can also manipulate just a subset of one type of neuron or control a circuit between groups of selected neurons in, say, the limbic system and others in the cortex. Deisseroth has also refined methods for delivering the opsin genes, typically by inserting into a virus both opsin genes and DNA to turn on those genes.

To activate the opsins, Deisseroth’s lab has attached laser diodes to tiny fiber-optic cables that reach the brain’s innermost structures. Along with the optical fibers, electrodes are implanted that record when neurons fire. “In the past year what’s happened is that these techniques have gone from being something interesting and useful in limited applications to something generalizable to any cell or question in biology,” Deisseroth says.

Most compelling, however, are experiments that have demonstrated the relevance of optogenetics to both basic science and medicine. At the Society for Neuroscience meeting in Chicago last October, Michael Häusser of University College London reported on an optogenetics experiment that showed how 100 neurons could trigger a memory stored in a much larger ensemble of about 100,000 neurons, suggesting how the technique may be used to understand memory formation.

Last spring Deisseroth’s group published an optogenetics study that helped to elucidate the workings of deep-brain stimulation, which uses electrodes implanted deep in the brain to alleviate the abnormal movements of Parkinson’s disease. The experiment called into questioncall sth in/into `question: doubt sth or cause sth to be doubted 怀疑某事物; 使某事物受怀疑】 the leading theory of how the technology works—activation of an area called the subthalamic nucleus. Instead the electrodes appear to exert their effects on nerve fibers that reach the subthalamic nucleus from the motor cortex and perhaps other areas. The finding has already led to a better understanding of how to deploy deep-brain electrodes. Given its fine-tuned specificity, optoelectronics might eventually replace deep-brain stimulation.

Although optogenetic control of human behavior may be years away, Deisseroth comments that the longer-range implications of the technology must be considered: “I’m not writing ethics papers, but I think about these issues every day, what it might mean to gain understanding and control over what is a desire, what is a need, what is hope.”

Note: this story was originally printed with the title "A Light in the Brain"

My comment
This article explains a new technology which is known as optogenetics. Although I am not entirely clear how the technology works, it seems that it provides methods for stimulating the deep-brain neurons in order to alleviate the abnormal movements of Parkinson's disease. If these techniques were to application to treat mental illness and neurodegenerative disorders, it would be a seminal event in the field of medicine. And inevitably, issues over ethics would be along with this advancement as well.

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发表于 2010-1-20 14:28:04 |只看该作者
probe 探索
pester  annoy persistently
subordinate   an assistant subject to the authority or control of another
trigger   引发;导致
psychiatry    the branch of medicine dealing with the diagnosis and treatment of mental disorders
legerdemain  欺骗的手法
manipulate   influence or control shrewdly or deviously
elucidate  阐明;说明

a wish list of techniques needed to fundamentally improve understanding of the way the brain processes information

The advent of what is known as optogenetics has even captured popular attention because of its ability to alter animal behavior—one research group demonstrated how light piped into a mouse’s brain can drive it to turn endlessly in circles.

I have conducted many brain-stimulation treatments in psychiatry that suffered greatly from a lack of precision.

Most compelling, however, are experiments that have demonstrated the relevance of optogenetics to both basic science and medicine.

My comment
The article introduces a way how the brain processes information. While, optogenetics, a new technology, is successful for its ability to alter animal behavior and it provides insight into the numbingly complex circuitry of the mammalian brain. Then, a virus is proved to be succeed in delivering a light-sensitive gene into specific sets of mammalian neurons. So, it is possible to trigger a memory. As researches going on, the possibility becomes bigger to deploy deep-brain electrodes.

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发表于 2010-1-20 15:27:22 |只看该作者
科技类,顶
勇于改变,付诸实践!

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美版版主 Cancer巨蟹座 荣誉版主 AW活动特殊奖 GRE梦想之帆 GRE斩浪之魂 GRE守护之星 US Assistant US Applicant

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发表于 2010-1-20 16:53:34 |只看该作者
comment:

In this article the author introduced a method of gaining control over specific classes of neurons while leaving the others more or less unaltered. This kind of technology might bring great breakthrough in the field of brain research. In this way, scientists can know more deeply and specifically about how the brain works and then give some useful ways to solve some problem about the brain or even improve human being's brain.

People are always curious about the nature and the function of our own body. As the brain of human beings is such a complex system, scientists might still need to walk a long way before the method is truly come into use with out any serious side effects. But scientists are always tring and never give up probing the unknown world.

So be confident that more and more mystry of the brain will be revealed!

Die luft der Freiheit weht
the wind of freedom blows

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发表于 2010-1-20 17:46:20 |只看该作者
Comments (2010-01-20):
It is not an easy thing to choose one article, which is about 1000 words, related with GRE writing and proper difficult level, as today's reading material. Comparing several articles, I choose this new technology essay in science field. At least, it is an interesting one for our tension mind.

At the beginning of the essay, author introduces the basic theory of using light and genes to probe the brain. Next, he shows us the progress of research. At last, he describes the application field of this invention. From this essay, one substantial creative technique has been presented. I have to say those scientists do a creative job, which nearly cross the limit of my imagination. Their achievements advance the development of optogenetics, while accelerates other filed progress, such mental disorders, optoelectronics and bioengineering. After reading this science introduction, I have begun to imagine the scene, optogenetic control of human behavior, in few years later.

Good sentences:
I’m not writing ethics papers, but I think about these issues every day, what it might mean to gain understanding and control over what is a desire, what is a need, what is hope.

Wrong Spelling:
science        sicence
achievement   achivement

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发表于 2010-1-20 18:19:06 |只看该作者
Comment:

This article introduces a new research on the combination of fiber optics and genetic engineering.

With the optogenetic we can gain control over specific classes of neurons, developing a series of study on the brain's inner working mechanism.The author recommends two aspects in applying this technology.One is to intrigue the neural cell so as to study how neural miswiring underlies neurological and mental disorders,the other is to stimulate certain cells that you want to target in order to switch neurons on or turn them off.Though the description,we know that because of the advantage of the optogenetic that it is light-sensitive and tiny,fired as soon as exposing to light in just a few milliseconds,it is widely used and solving big problems in neurology study.

That is what I learned from the article. The development of science research is at a growing tendency on the molecular level,and the research methods is becoming more precise.I like the last sentence in the article. I’m not writing ethics papers, but I think about these issues every day, what it might mean to gain understanding and control over what is a desire, what is a need, what is hope.
既然选择了,就没有退路,坚定地一直走下去!

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发表于 2010-1-20 18:23:54 |只看该作者
本帖最后由 qisaiman 于 2010-1-21 22:36 编辑

站位 时间越来越紧张了

potent tool
wish list
neuron
genetic engineering
mammalian
furnish

thanks to the fiber optics and genetic engineering ,a new powerful tool can be obtained to concentrate on a particular neuron of the mammalian brain, by observing the reaction of which to the light, one can tell the function of those neuron, thus providing possibility to a novel and effective way to heal the mental disease.
but as another example of technology being a double-edged sword, there is worries that this
optogenetics can be used to manipulate the behavior of the object, not only the patient but also the normal.

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发表于 2010-1-20 20:39:17 |只看该作者
QUESTION:


I’m not writing ethics papers, but I think about these issues every day, what it might mean to gain understanding and control over what is a desire, what is a need, what is hope.”

他说他不是在写什么ethics paper,为什么他要这样说啊,我感觉这可能是一种开玩笑的话,或者是一种比喻之类的,但是我理解不到他的笑点在哪儿





potent:有效的
neuron:神经元

pester:纠缠

subordinate:下级
numb:麻木的
mammalian :哺乳动物
schizophrenia.:精神分裂

seminal :有创意的

psychiatrist:精神病专家
neurodegenerative:神经病变的
opsin:视蛋白
cell membrane:细胞膜
legerdemain:手法
cortex:大脑皮层
limbic system:边缘系统
elucidate:解释
alleviate:减轻
subthalamic :丘下脑的
motor cortex:运动区皮层
deploy:部署,调动




good sentences:
The advent of what is known as optogenetics has even captured popular attention because of its ability to alter animal behavior—one research group demonstrated how light piped into a mouse’s brain can drive it to turn endlessly in circles.

  
MY COMMENTS:
This report is mainly about some new technology to probe the brain. It is not qiutequite mature, but it has been used in many clinical diseases, and got some achievements. The detail of the technology is a little complicated, so here I won't repeat them. I just want to exclaim that how clever our humanbeinghuman being is, and the science is developing faster and faster. It is that only 30 years since Francis Crick co-discovered the DNA's structure in 1979, when people can know more and more details about our human beings' brain. And I want to ask, what it will be in next 30 years. Can cancer be cured? Maybe yes. We are all excepting.

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发表于 2010-1-20 22:34:16 |只看该作者
Comment

When I was studying in the high school, I was really fascinating into the biology field. I like the biology teacher, the biology books and almost anything related to this subject. However, I feel so boring reading this article without any reasonable explanations.

I know it’s about the genes and a new technology known as optogenetics, which provides another choice for stimulating the deep-brain neurons in order to alleviate the abnormal movements of Parkinson's disease, but I am really not into it.

Parkinson is a disease spread fast in these years and it’s hard to cure. If this is a way to help, I really appreciate it.
想要而未得到的,是因为你值得拥有更好的。

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发表于 2010-1-20 23:40:32 |只看该作者

考试周几门大头已经过去,回归回归!

--------------------------

Using Light and Genes to Probe the Brain


Optogenetics emerges as a potent tool to study the brain's inner workings


By Gary Stix   


In 1979 Francis Crick, famed(有名的 表达)co-discoverer of DNA’s structure, published an article in Scientific American that set out a wish list of techniques needed to fundamentally improve understanding of the way the brain processes information. High on his wish list was a method of gaining control over specific classes of neurons while, he wrote, “leaving the others more or less unaltered.”


Over the past few years Crick’s vision for targeting neurons has begun to materialize(实现!)thanks to a sophisticated combination of fiber optics and genetic engineering. The advent of what is known as optogenetics has even captured popular attention because of its ability to alter animal behavior—one research group demonstrated how light piped into a mouse’s brain can drive it to turn endlessly in circles. Such feats have inspired much public comment, including a joke made by comedian Jay Leno in 2006 about the prospect for an optogenetically controlled fly pestering George W. Bush.


Controlling a subordinate or a spouse with a souped-up laser pointer may be essential for science-fiction dystopia and late-night humor, but in reality optogenetics has emerged as the most important new technology for providing insight into the numbingly complex circuitry of the mammalian brain. It has already furnished clues as to how neural miswiring underlies neurological and mental disorders, including Parkinson’s disease and schizophrenia.


A seminal event(开创性的) that sparked widespread neuroscience interest came in 2005, when Karl Deisseroth and his colleagues at Stanford University and at the Max Planck Institute for Biophysics in Frankfurt demonstrated how a virus could be used to deliver a light-sensitive gene called channelrhodopsin-2 into specific sets of mammalian neurons. Once equipped with the gene (taken from pond algae), the neurons fired when exposed to light pulses. A box on Crick’s list could be checked off: this experiment and ones that were soon to follow showed how it would be possible to trigger or extinguish selected neurons, and not their neighbors, in just a few milliseconds, the speed at which they normally fire. Hundreds of laboratories worldwide have since adopted Deisseroth’s technique.


A 38-year-old psychiatrist by training who still sees patients once a week, Deisseroth entered the field of bioengineering because of his frustration over the inadequate tools available to research and treat mental illness and neurodegenerative disorders. “I have conducted many brain-stimulation treatments in psychiatry that suffered greatly from a lack of precision. You can stimulate certain cells that you want to target, but you also stimulate all of the wrong cells as well,” he says. Instead of just observing the effects from a drug or an implanted electrode, optogenetics brings researchers closer to the fundamental causes of a behavior.


Since 2005 Deisseroth’s laboratory—at times (这里at times是什么意思??)in collaboration with leading neuroscience groups—has assembled a powerful tool kit based on channelrhodopsin-2 and other so-called opsins. By adjusting the opening or closing of channels in cell membranes, opsins can switch neurons on or turn them off. Molecular legerdemain can also manipulate just a subset of one type of neuron or control a circuit between groups of selected neurons in, say, the limbic system and others in the cortex. Deisseroth has also refined methods for delivering the opsin genes, typically by inserting into a virus both opsin genes and DNA to turn on those genes.


To activate the opsins, Deisseroth’s lab has attached laser diodes to tiny fiber-optic cables that reach the brain’s innermost structures. Along with the optical fibers, electrodes are implanted that record when neurons fire. “In the past year what’s happened is that these techniques have gone from being something interesting and useful in limited applications to something generalizable to any cell or question in biology,” Deisseroth says.



Most compelling(??), however, are experiments that have demonstrated te relevance of optogenetics to both basic science and medicine. At the Society for Neuroscience meeting in Chicago last October, Michael Häusser of University College London reported on an optogenetics experiment that showed how 100 neurons could trigger a memory stored in a much larger ensemble of about 100,000 neurons, suggesting how the technique may be used to understand memory formation.


Last spring Deisseroth’s group published an optogenetics study that helped to elucidate the workings of deep-brain stimulation, which uses electrodes implanted deep in the brain to alleviate the abnormal movements of Parkinson’s disease. The experiment called into question the leading theory of how the technology works—activation of an area called the subthalamic nucleus. Instead the electrodes appear to exert their effects on nerve fibers that reach the subthalamic nucleus from the motor cortex and perhaps other areas. The finding has already led to a better understanding of how to deploy deep-brain electrodes. Given its fine-tuned specificity, optoelectronics might eventually replace deep-brain stimulation.



Although optogenetic control of human behavior may be years away, Deisseroth comments that the longer-range implications of the technology must be considered: “I’m not writing ethics papers, but I think about these issues every day, what it might mean to gain understanding and control over what is a desire, what is a need, what is hope.”


-------------------------

It is the second discovery on brain study that I have heard recently. The first one is about how the micro computer reads people’s minds and reacts in a digitalized world, a typical computer science study. What this article said is that scientists have found a plot on discovering the control of brains. I am pretty excited to here that, since I have being dreamed for so long that one day man can input knowledge just like computer does. Once we learnt then we will never forget. I am wondering if there is a chance that the first discovering conducted in MIT may have a chance to combine with the later one so that the biological science can help the computer programmers to type a seminal program for brain controlling.

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发表于 2010-1-21 01:18:37 |只看该作者
materialize thanks to a sophisticated combination of fiber optics(纤维光学) and genetic engineering(遗传工程).



dystopia(n. 反面乌托邦,非理想化的地方,地狱般的处境)



Parkinson’s disease ([]帕金森氏症,震颤性麻痹) and schizophrenia (.精神分裂症).




milliseconds (one thousandth of a second)



Molecular legerdemain (n 欺骗的手法;戏法) can also manipulate just a subset(子集) of one type of neuron or control a circuit between groups of selected neurons in, say, the limbic system (a group of subcortical structures (as the hypothalamus下丘脑, the hippocampus海马状态突出, and the amygdala扁桃腺) of the brain that are concerned especially with emotion and motivation) and others in the cortex(大脑皮层).


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There was a man told me, as all we’ve known that, brain was an amazing place which we never know what we can find from it. We can explore it with the help of high-tech, like we learn from this article, as we know about the current exploration by optogenetics, which has the ability to alter animal behavior and might replace deep-brain stimulation eventually.
The experiments and remarks both come the words said Deisseroth. It is a path science will move on not only a general direction. Can we say now is a predictior of the future this time? I am wondering about that…

我们是休眠中的火山,是冬眠的眼镜蛇,或者说,是一颗定时炸弹,等待自己的最好时机。也许这个最好的时机还没有到来,所以只好继续等待着。在此之前,万万不可把自己看轻了。
                                                                                     ——王小波

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发表于 2010-1-21 09:38:42 |只看该作者
neuron n.神经元

soup up  加大马力的

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To be honest, I don't like giving comments about this kind of paper with only description about a new technology and little controversial points. Thus I always feel like having nothing to say. In this essay, the author tells us something about the ontogenetic which may be a combination of optics and genetics. As I know, because of absence of a precise method to reveal he activities of our brain, out understanding about our most important organ is as little as we do about a planet millions of light-years away. However, with this promising and groundbreaking technology, now It is possible for scientists to scan the micro machanism of the brain and finally help people get away from the shadow of Parkinson's disease and schizophrenia.

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发表于 2010-1-21 23:04:19 |只看该作者

High on his wish list was...
The advent of...
...has captured popular attention...
Pester:to harass with petty irritations  : ANNOY
Dystopia:an imaginary place where people lead dehumanized and often fearful lives; ANTI-UTOPIA
Opsin:视蛋白
Limbic system: a group of subcortical structures (as the hypothalamus, the hippocampus, and the amygdala) of the brain that are concerned especially with emotion and motivation
CortexL:皮层
diodes:二极管


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About the content of the article itself, I do not have much to say. It is more like a passage for reading training. But it does not reach the difficulty of a GRE reading articles, and it is not likes the styles of typical TOEFL articles.

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RE: [REBORN FROM THE ASHES][comment][01.20] [修改]

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