By: Alireza
Hejazi
The
amazing story of future processing in human brain has been of great
attention among many neuroscientists, psychologists and even social
researchers. Each of them has regarded the issue from a distinctive
point of view. Their researches are proceeding in new ways and
methods and we should wait for more interesting results in the
coming time. The interesting contents of a number of articles that I
have received yet made me to make a review by compiling their
abstracts in the following. I hope these cues may enable those who
are interested in studying more about this important issue. Perhaps
in the near future we may have to make a serious review concerning
our past understandings on the way that our brain thinks about the
future.
Neural
substrates of envisioning the future
The
ability to envision specific future episodes is a ubiquitous mental
phenomenon that has seldom been discussed in the neuroscience
literature. In a study
done at department
of Psychology, Washington University,
subjects underwent functional MRI while using event cues (e.g.,
Birthday) as a guide to vividly envision a personal future event,
remember a personal memory, or imagine an event involving a familiar
individual. Two basic patterns of data emerged. One set of regions
(e.g., within left lateral premotor cortex; left precuneus; right
posterior cerebellum) was more active while envisioning the future
than while recollecting the past (and more active in both of these
conditions than in the task involving imagining another person).
These regions appear similar to those emerging from the literature
on imagined (simulated) bodily movements. A second set of regions
(e.g., bilateral posterior cingulate; bilateral parahippocampal
gyrus; left occipital cortex) demonstrated indistinguishable
activity during the future and past tasks (but greater activity in
both tasks than the imagery control task); similar regions have been
shown to be important for remembering previously encountered
visual-spatial contexts.
Hence,
differences between the future and past tasks are attributed to
differences in the demands placed on regions that underlie motor
imagery of bodily movements, and similarities in activity for these
two tasks are attributed to the reactivation of previously
experienced visual?spatial contexts. That is, subjects appear to
place their future scenarios in well known visual?spatial contexts.
These results offer insight into the fundamental and little-studied
capacity of vivid mental projection of oneself in the
future.
For more information view: http://www.pnas.org_cgi_doi_10.1073_pnas.0610082104
Imagining
the future
People
can consciously re-experience past events and pre-experience
possible future events. A recent fMRI study examined the neural
regions mediating the construction and elaboration of past and
future events. Participants were cued with a noun for 20 s and
instructed to construct a past or future event within a specified
time period (week, year, 5?20 years). Once participants had the
event in mind, they made a button press and for the remainder of the
20 s elaborated on the event. Importantly, all events generated were
episodic and did not differ on a number of phenomenological
qualities (detail, emotionality, personal significance,
field/observer perspective). Conjunction analyses indicated the left
hippocampus was commonly engaged by past and future event
construction, along with posterior visuospatial regions, but
considerable neural differentiation was also observed during the
construction phase.
Future
events recruited regions involved in prospective thinking and
generation processes, specifically right frontopolar cortex and left
ventrolateral prefrontal cortex, respectively. Furthermore, future
event construction uniquely engaged the right hippocampus, possibly
as a response to the novelty of these events. In contrast to the
construction phase, elaboration was characterized by remarkable
overlap in regions comprising the autobiographical memory retrieval
network, attributable to the common processes engaged during
elaboration, including self-referential processing, contextual and
episodic imagery. This striking neural overlap is consistent with
findings that amnesic patients exhibit deficits in both past and
future thinking, and confirms that the episodic system contributes
importantly to imagining the future.
The
bibliographic information of this research article is available at:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2006.10.016
Neural
mechanisms mediating future oriented optimism
Humans
expect positive events in the future even when there is no evidence
to support such expectations. For example, people expect to live
longer and be healthier than average, they underestimate their
likelihood of getting a divorce1, and overestimate their prospects
for success on the job market. A group of researchers examined how
the brain generates this pervasive optimism bias. Here we report
that this tendency was related specifically to enhanced activation
in the
amygdala
and in the rostral anterior cingulate cortex when imagining positive
future events relative to negative ones, suggesting a key role for
areas involved in monitoring emotional salience in mediating the
optimism bias. These are the same regions that show irregularities
in depression, which has been related to
pessimism.
Across
individuals, activity in the rostral anterior cingulated cortex was
correlated with trait optimism. The current study highlights how the
brain may generate the tendency to engage in the projection of
positive future events, suggesting that the effective integration
and regulation of emotional and autobiographical information
supports the projection of positive future events in healthy
individuals, and is related to optimism.
The
results of this study can be reviewed at: http://www.nature.com/doifinder/10.1038/nature06280
Neuroanatomical
Substrates of Foresight in Schizophrenia
The
ability to think of the long-term consequences of one's behavior and
use this information to guide present and future actions, commonly
referred to as foresight, is a key higher-order cognitive ability
that may be deficient among persons with schizophrenia and
substantially limit the degree to which such individuals experience
a functional recovery from the disease. A remarkable research done
at University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine investigated the
neuroanatomical basis of foresight in schizophrenia, in order to
identify potential brain regions that may underly impaired
foresightfulness among this population. Participants in the early
course of schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder (N = 50)
were assessed using structural magnetic resonance imaging and
clinician-rated measures of foresight and psychopathology.
Voxel-based morphometry was used to examine the relationship between
foresight and regional gray matter volume in the ventromedial
prefrontal, orbitofrontal and cingulate cortices. Significant
positive associations were observed between foresight and gray
matter volume density in the right orbitofrontal, ventromedial
prefrontal, and posterior cingulate cortices, as well as the left
ventromedial prefrontal and anterior cingulate cortices, after
correcting for multiple comparisons.
These
relationships persisted after adjusting for age, gender, illness
duration, and psychopathology. Better foresight was most strongly
associated with increased gray matter in the right
orbitofrontal/ventromedial prefrontal cortex, suggesting that
reductions in gray matter volume in this region may be associated
with impaired foresight in schizophrenia. Implications and
directions for future research are discussed.
The
result of this research published in final edited form
as:
Schizophr
Res. 2008 August ; 103(1-3): 62?70.
doi:10.1016/j.schres.2008.05.012.
Psychological
travel through time
Although
we can't technically travel through time, when we think of the past
or the future we engage in a sort of mental time travel. This
uniquely human ability to psychologically travel through time
arguably sets us apart from other species. Researchers have recently
looked at how mental time travel is represented in the sensorimotor
systems that regulate human movement. It turns out our perceptions
of space and time are tightly coupled.
University of Aberdeen psychological
scientists Lynden Miles, Louise Nind and Neil Macrae conducted a
study to measure this in the lab. They fitted participants with a
motion sensor while they imagined either future or past events. The
researchers found that thinking about past or future events can
literally move us: Engaging in mental time travel (a.k.a.
chronesthesia) resulted in physical movements corresponding to the
metaphorical direction of time. Those who thought of the past swayed
backward while those who thought of the future moved
forward.
These findings
reported online in Psychological Science, a journal of the
Association for Psychological Science, suggest that chronesthesia
may be grounded in processes that link spatial and temporal
metaphors (e.g., future= forward, past= backward) to our systems of
perception and action. "The embodiment of time and space yields an
overt behavioral marker of an otherwise invisible mental operation,"
explains Miles and colleagues. The original news is available
at: http://www.physorg.com/news183297421.html
The
problem of duration
Perceived
duration is conventionally assumed to correspond with objective
duration, but a growing literature suggests a more complex picture.
For example, repeated stimuli appear briefer in duration than a
novel stimulus of equal physical duration. Scientists suggest that
such duration illusions appear to parallel the neural phenomenon of
repetition suppression, and they marshal evidence for a new
hypothesis: the experience of duration is a signature of the amount
of energy expended in representing a stimulus, i.e. the coding
efficiency. This novel hypothesis offers a unified explanation for
almost a dozen illusions in the literature in which subjective
duration is modulated by properties of the stimulus such as size,
brightness, motion and rate of flicker. For more information
you can study a useful article written by David
M. Eagleman and Vani Pariyadath titles: "Is
subjective duration a signature of coding efficiency?" The article can be
downloaded from: http://rstb.royalsocietypublishing.org/