Researchers used light to switch on, and then switch off, social-behavior
deficits in mice that resemble those seen in people with autism and
schizophrenia, thanks to a technology that allows scientists to
precisely manipulate nerve activity in the brain. In synchrony with this
experimentally induced socially aberrant behavior, the mice exhibited a
brain-wave pattern called gamma oscillation that has been associated
with autism and schizophrenia in humans, the researchers say.
The findings, published online in Nature on July 27,
lend credence to a hypothesis that has been long floated but hard to
test, until now. They mark the first demonstration, the researchers
said, that elevating the brain’s susceptibility to stimulation can
produce social deficits resembling those of autism and schizophrenia,
and that then restoring the balance eases those symptoms.
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