Sogar das unbewusste Gehirn kann lernen – und vorhersagen, was Sie als nächstes sagen werden. Neuronale Aufzeichnungen von Menschen unter Narkose zeigen, dass ihr Gehirn Wörter und Geräusche verarbeitet.

    https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-01465-0

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    1. >People given general anaesthesia fall into a coma-like state in which their memory and perception of pain are switched off. But new data reveal that the hippocampus — a deep brain structure crucial for memory — remains remarkably active, parsing the grammar and meaning of spoken words and even anticipating what will be said next.

      >The research, published today in Nature1, challenges the assumption that complex cognition, such as grasping semantics and forecasting future events, can occur only if a person is fully conscious. By observing people’s individual neurons firing in real time while they are under anaesthesia, researchers discovered that the brain receives stimuli and actively processes what those signals mean.

      >“The brain has developed such amazing, sophisticated mechanisms for doing all these complex tasks all day long, that it can do some of these things even without us being aware,” says Sameer Sheth, a neurosurgeon at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas.

      Here’s an excerpt of the story. I’m the reporter who wrote the story. As always, I’m keen to hear if there’s anything I missed, or if you have anything else that you think should be on my radar. My Signal is mkozlov.01. You can stay anonymous. Happy to answer any questions about how I reported this story too!

      PS: If you hit the paywall, make a free account. It should let you read the full story.

    2. coconutpiecrust on

      So, I’m, does this mean that people under anesthesia feel everything but just can’t remember and can’t react to it?..

    3. I was waking up from an epidural with sedation and I remember asking a nurse ‘Is this the real world?’ I have no idea why I asked that.

    4. This tracks with [scientists that put 200,000 neurons on a chip and watched it learn to play Doom.](https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-human-neurons-on-a-chip-learned-to-play-doom/)

      > “The temptation is to anthropomorphize and say, oh, they like [playing Doom],” Kagan says. “But this isn’t an animal or a human or anything even as complex as an insect. It’s a system. It’s kind of like saying, ‘Does a computer like or dislike the reward function on a [reinforcement-learning] model?’”

      It raises such weird and uncomfortable questions about where life/consciousness/sentience begin.

    5. MjolnirStone on

      As someone who has woken up during surgery multiple times and attempted to engage in the conversation that had been going on around me while I was under, all I can say is…yeah.

    6. As someone who does most of their learning at this weird unconscious level… This makes a lot of sense to me.

    7. manatwork01 on

      I listen to lectures while dreaming and find it super easy to rewatch and learn the second time through. Who knows if it’s placebo or not but I’ve done this off and on since high school when I learned about it.

    8. a_human_male on

      I have fallen asleep watching video lectures and I’ll be in a random venue in the dream but someones giving the speech. to It’ll usually be some other random event like a wedding and other things are going on. But I would catch most of the lecture.

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