Geometry of the brain, dimensions of the mind

Researchers identify new ways to characterize states of consciousness

11:47 AM

Author | Kelly Malcom

human brain with glowing purple blue lights out of brain
Getty Images

What it means to be conscious is more than just a philosophical question. Researchers continue to investigate how conscious experience arises from the electrochemical activity of the human brain. The answer has important implications for the way brain health is understood, from coma, wherein a person is alive but unable to move or respond to his or her environment, to surgical anesthesia, to the altered thought processes of schizophrenia.

Recent research suggests that there's no one location in the brain that causes consciousness, pointing to a network phenomenon. However, tracing the various linkages between regions in the brain networks that give rise to awareness and wakefulness has been elusive.

A new approach using functional MRI, an imaging technique that allows you to see and measure brain activity through changes in blood flow over time, provides new insight into how we describe and study conscious states

“Consciousness is complex and studying it is like solving a scrambled Rubik’s cube,” said Zirui Huang, Ph.D., research assistant professor in the University of Michigan Medical School Department of Anesthesiology. “If you look at just a single surface, you may be confused by the way it is organized. You need to work on the puzzle looking at all dimensions.”

When it comes to consciousness, these dimensions can include 1) arousability, that is, the ability of the brain to be awake; 2) awareness, or what we actually experience, like the redness of a rose; and 3) sensory organization, or how sights and sounds and feelings become woven together to create our seamless conscious experience.

For decades, though, these dimensions were just considered conceptually, without any mapping to brain activity itself. In the study by Huang, George Mashour, M.D., Ph.D., professor and chair of the Department of Anesthesiology and founder of the Center for Consciousness Science, and Anthony Hudetz, DBM, Ph.D., director of the Center for Consciousness Science, the investigators sought to find those dimensions of the mind in the geometry of the brain. 

Typically, brain imaging studies assess discrete, well-defined brain areas. To understand this, consider the state of Colorado on a map of the United States.  It has very clear boundaries in an almost rectangular shape.

However, the borders separating, for example, Colorado and Wyoming, are arbitrary. By contrast, looking at the topology of the mountains across Colorado and Wyoming give you a more informative, natural view of the region. The investigators did something very similar in this neuroimaging study: instead of looking at clearly defined brain regions, they investigated the topology or gradients across brain regions.

To develop a map of these so-called cortical gradients of consciousness, the team used fMRI data from study participants who were awake, anesthetized, in a form of coma, or who had psychiatric diagnoses such as schizophrenia.

The team was then able to arrange recordings from 400 different brain regions into gradients and compare how they change in relation to these states or diagnoses. They found three cortical gradients that seemed to align with the dimensions of consciousness, including arousability, awareness, and sensory organization.

“What used to be mapped only as a helpful diagram of conscious states might now be mapped in the brain itself,” said Hudetz, senior author on the study. 

“Our study opens a new view of the link between consciousness and the brain,” said Huang. Furthermore, he notes, the results have the potential for developing brain-based diagnoses or assessment for neurologic patients.

“This article represents an important contribution to the science of consciousness and aligns with our mission of achieving deeper understanding while advancing clinical care,” said Mashour.

Paper cited: “Functional Geometry of the Cortex Encodes Dimensions of Consciousness,” Nature Communications. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-35764-7

Live your healthiest life: Get tips from top experts weekly. Subscribe to the Michigan Health blog newsletter

Headlines from the frontlines: The power of scientific discovery harnessed and delivered to your inbox every week. Subscribe to the Michigan Health Lab blog newsletter

Like Podcasts? Add the Michigan Medicine News Break on Spotify, Apple Podcasts or anywhere you listen to podcasts.


More Articles About: Neurology Neurosurgery & Neurological Procedures Neurological (Brain) Conditions All Research Topics Hospitals & Centers
Health Lab word mark overlaying blue cells
Health Lab

Explore a variety of health care news & stories by visiting the Health Lab home page for more articles.

Media Contact Public Relations

Department of Communication at Michigan Medicine

[email protected]

734-764-2220

Stay Informed

Want top health & research news weekly? Sign up for Health Lab’s newsletters today!

Subscribe
Featured News & Stories black room with person visual far away walking towards glowing light
Health Lab
Evidence of conscious-like activity in the dying brain
A Michigan Medicine study provides early evidence of a surge of activity correlated with consciousness in the dying brain.
hospital beds in hallway
Health Lab
Using data to drive sepsis care
Michigan Medicine expert, Hallie Prescott, M.D., discusses successful statewide efforts to improve sepsis treatment–and setting the bar for change at the national level
Minding Memory with a microphone and a shadow of a microphone on a blue background
Minding Memory
Understanding Dementia Risk Factors with Helen C. Kales, MD
In this episode, Matt & Lauren have the unique opportunity to talk with Dr. Helen C. Kales, a geriatric psychiatrist and health services researcher who has participated in the previous Lancet Commissions on Dementia Prevention, Intervention and Care – including the most recent one released in 2024. Dr. Kales discusses how the commission puts together all the evidence to make recommendations that can play a crucial role in dementia prevention. Dr. Kales is the Chair of the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences and Joe P. Tupin Professor of Psychiatry at the University of California at Davis and has dedicated much of her career to improving the lives of patients living with dementia.
drawing of doctor with question mark about head with patient questioning and stressed over paperwork in exam room
Health Lab
People find medical test results hard to understand, increasing overall worry
In a published research letter in JAMA, researchers tested whether people could understand standard pathology reports and whether a patient-centered report might improve understanding.
glasses on newspaper text
Health Lab
12 stories from 2024 worth a second look
Health Lab writers selected 12 stories for you to read from 2024 that are worth revisiting before kicking off a brand-new year.
child looking at family outside of kitchen area
Health Lab
Encouraging spirituality in teens without forcing participation
Among parents who plan to attend religious services this holiday season, nearly half would insist their teen join even if they didn’t want to, a poll suggests.