Your brain transmits information about your current location and memories of past locations over the same neural pathways using different frequencies of
a rhythmic electrical activity called gamma waves, report neuroscientists at The University of Texas at Austin.
Researchers studying the brain have long been interested in its neural oscillations,
the rhythmic electrical activity that plays an important role in the transmission of information within the brain's neural circuits.
«Modeling
the rhythmic electrical activities of the brain: A new mathematical tool has been developed to help computational neuroscientists explore neural circuits» dynamic responses to stimuli.»
Just as computers use programming languages such as Java, the brain seems to have its own operating languages — a bewildering set of codes hidden in the rates and timing with which neurons fire as well as
the rhythmic electrical activities that oscillate through brain circuits.
Not exact matches
As signals are sent from one cell to the next,
rhythmic patterns of
electrical activity, commonly known as brain waves, are generated.
Brain
activity is indeed
rhythmic and appears as periodic
electrical variations, classified according to their wavelength.