Brains under general anaesthesia still process language, challenging theories of consciousness
Researchers have found that patients under general anaesthesia can still process language at a sophisticated level, with their brains distinguishing between nouns, verbs and adjectives while listening to stories. Even more strikingly, neural activity showed signs of predicting upcoming words before they were spoken. The findings challenge established theories of consciousness and suggest new possibilities for brain-computer interface technology.
Comments
No comments yet
Comments
No comments yet โ be the first to weigh in ๐
No comments yet. Be the first!