摘要:2013年職稱英語衛(wèi)生類閱讀理解強化訓(xùn)練。
Sleep Lets Brain File Memories
To sleep. Perchance to file? Findings published online this week by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences further support the theory that the brain organizes and stows memories formed during the day while the rest of the body is catching zzz's.
Gyorgy Buzsaki of Rutgers University5 and his colleagues analyzed the brain waves of sleeping rats and mice. Specifically, they examined the electrical activity emanating from6 the somatosensory neocortex (an area that processes sensory information) and the hippocampus, which is a center for learning and memory. The scientists found that oscillations in brain waves from the two regions appear to be intertwined. So-called sleep spindles (bursts of activity from the neocortex) were followed tens of milliseconds later by beats in the hippocampus known as ripples. The team posits that this interplay between the two brain regions is a key step in memory consolidation. A second study, also published online this week by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, links age-associated memory decline to high glucose levels.
Previous research had shown that individuals with diabetes suffer from increased memory problems. In the new work, Antonio Convit of New York University School of Medicine and his collaborators studied 30 people whose average age was 69 to investigate whether sugar levels, which tend to increase with age, affect memory in healthy people as well. The scientists administered11 recall tests, brain scans and glucose tolerance tests, which measure how quickly sugar is absorbed from the blood by the body's tissues. Subjects with the poorest memory recollection, the team discovered, also displayed the poorest glucose tolerance. In addition, their brain scans showed more hippocampus shrinkage than those of subjects better able to absorb blood sugar.
"Our study suggests that this impairment12 may contribute to the memory deficits13 that occur as people age." Convit says. "And it raises the intriguing possibility that improving glucose tolerance could reverse some age-associated problems in cognition.14" Exercise and weight control can help keep glucose levels in check15, so there may be one more reason to go to the gym.
詞匯:
perchance adv. 偶然;可能
online n. 在線的
stow vt. 貯藏,堆裝
emanate vi. 發(fā)源
somatosensory adj. 體覺的
neocortex n. 新(大腦)皮質(zhì)
oscillation n. 振蕩
intertwine v. 纏繞
spindle n. 紡錘體
ripple n. 波動,脈動
diabetes n. 糖尿病
recollection n. 回憶
shrinkage n. 收縮
impairment n. 損傷
intrigue n. 引起。。。興趣(或好奇心)
cognition n. 認識
注釋:
1. file memories:歸檔并儲存記憶。 file:意為 "to put or keep (papers,etc. ) in useful order for storage or reference"(把…歸檔)。
2. To sleep. Perchance to file? :從莎士比亞筆下哈姆雷特的獨白中的名句" To sleep: perchance to dream. "改編而來。
3. the Proceedings: (科學(xué)文獻、會議文獻)匯編,常用復(fù)數(shù)形式。
4. zzz:(擬聲詞)打鼾聲
5. Rutgers University:美國新澤西州立大學(xué) (the State University of New Jersey)。
6. emanating from:發(fā)源于。
7. neocortex:新(大腦)皮質(zhì),尤指大的高等哺乳動物大腦中新生長的部分,也叫做 neopallium。neo-:前縀,意思是"新的"。
8. thehippocampus:大腦側(cè)面腦室壁上的隆起物,也稱"海馬狀突起",在泛記過程中起主要作用。
9. tens of milliseconds:幾十毫秒
10. age-associated memory decline:與年齡相關(guān)的記憶衰退
11. administer:實施
12. this impairment:指上句中 hippocampus
1、凡本網(wǎng)注明“來源:醫(yī)學(xué)教育網(wǎng)”的所有作品,版權(quán)均屬醫(yī)學(xué)教育網(wǎng)所有,未經(jīng)本網(wǎng)授權(quán)不得轉(zhuǎn)載、鏈接、轉(zhuǎn)貼或以其他方式使用;已經(jīng)本網(wǎng)授權(quán)的,應(yīng)在授權(quán)范圍內(nèi)使用,且必須注明“來源:醫(yī)學(xué)教育網(wǎng)”。違反上述聲明者,本網(wǎng)將追究其法律責(zé)任。
2、本網(wǎng)部分資料為網(wǎng)上搜集轉(zhuǎn)載,均盡力標(biāo)明作者和出處。對于本網(wǎng)刊載作品涉及版權(quán)等問題的,請作者與本網(wǎng)站聯(lián)系,本網(wǎng)站核實確認后會盡快予以處理。
本網(wǎng)轉(zhuǎn)載之作品,并不意味著認同該作品的觀點或真實性。如其他媒體、網(wǎng)站或個人轉(zhuǎn)載使用,請與著作權(quán)人聯(lián)系,并自負法律責(zé)任。
3、本網(wǎng)站歡迎積極投稿
4、聯(lián)系方式:
編輯信箱:mededit@cdeledu.com
電話:010-82311666
010 82311666
400 650 1888