Neuroscience /coloradan/ en The Sound of Science /coloradan/2023/07/10/sound-science <span>The Sound of Science </span> <span><span>Anonymous (not verified)</span></span> <span><time datetime="2023-07-10T02:00:00-06:00" title="Monday, July 10, 2023 - 02:00">Mon, 07/10/2023 - 02:00</time> </span> <div> <div class="imageMediaStyle focal_image_wide"> <img loading="lazy" src="/coloradan/sites/default/files/styles/focal_image_wide/public/article-thumbnail/03-16-2018_v1_ag.jpg?h=7e82f663&amp;itok=UmNYyw_y" width="1200" height="600" alt="Brain Music Imagery"> </div> </div> <div role="contentinfo" class="container ucb-article-tags" itemprop="keywords"> <span class="visually-hidden">Tags:</span> <div class="ucb-article-tag-icon" aria-hidden="true"> <i class="fa-solid fa-tags"></i> </div> <a href="/coloradan/taxonomy/term/296" hreflang="en">Engineering</a> <a href="/coloradan/taxonomy/term/172" hreflang="en">Music</a> <a href="/coloradan/taxonomy/term/1205" hreflang="en">Neuroscience</a> </div> <span>Kelsey Yandura</span> <div class="ucb-article-content ucb-striped-content"> <div class="container"> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--article-content paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div class="ucb-article-content-media ucb-article-content-media-above"> <div> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--media paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div> <div class="imageMediaStyle large_image_style"> <img loading="lazy" src="/coloradan/sites/default/files/styles/large_image_style/public/2024-10/03-16-2018_v1_ag.jpg?itok=eWudxFeZ" width="1500" height="563" alt="Sound of Science Banner"> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="ucb-article-text d-flex align-items-center" itemprop="articleBody"> <div><p>Grace Leslie stands in front of a crowd, a flute perched at her lips. In many ways, the ingredients of this performance are nothing extraordinary: performer, audience, instrument … other than, perhaps, the odd-looking headband affixed to her head.&nbsp;</p><p>When she begins, the silvery sounds of the flute are joined by a wash of vaguely electronic tones. The result is ethereal and strange, moving between atonal and harmonious, unsettling and soothing.&nbsp;</p><p>What you’re hearing are Leslie’s brain waves. During this performance of “Vessels,” a 30-minute brain-body concert, she wears a special EEG (electroencephalogram) monitoring device that measures electrical activity from her brain. These brain waves are then sonified by means of an algorithm that imprints their spectrum onto a bank of recorded samples of flute and singing.&nbsp;</p><p>In other words, Leslie is playing two instruments: the flute and her own brain.&nbsp;</p><p>This is the sort of work Leslie does in the <a href="/atlas/brain-music-lab-0" rel="nofollow">Brain Music Lab</a> at the <a href="/atlas/academics/grad/ctd-ci?gclid=CjwKCAjwkLCkBhA9EiwAka9QRmWwId2cYmTNc2QY_7BFhiePF53bliOOMvQHptbCQTQvjZkk-CwAARoCAqQQAvD_BwE" rel="nofollow">ATLAS Institute</a>, ŷڱƵ Boulder’s interdisciplinary institute for radical creativity and invention.&nbsp;</p><h2>The Lab as a Venn Diagram</h2><div class="feature-layout-callout feature-layout-callout-medium"><div class="ucb-callout-content"><blockquote><p><strong>“We discover different kinds of ways to transform data with sound and transform sound with data.”</strong></p></blockquote></div></div><p>Interdisciplinary at its core, the Brain Music Lab is focused on the nexus between music, technology and neuroscience.</p><p>“We look at people experiencing music and study their brain waves,” said Leslie. “From there, we develop new ways of working with that data and then often transform it back into the performance or a new artistic piece.”&nbsp;</p><p>Typically, students begin with a broad scientific concept. For example: “What would we learn if we measured the brain waves of jazz performers during an improvisational set?”&nbsp;</p><p>At an ordinary lab, measuring that data may be the end result. However, the Brain Music Lab takes it a step further. Once those brain waves are measured and analyzed, the question becomes: “How do we transform what we’ve learned into a new artistic expression?” The result may be a visual art piece, a composition or even a new form of electronic instrument.&nbsp;</p><p>The lab works on the continuum of an art-science loop.&nbsp;</p><p>“We discover different kinds of ways to transform data with sound and transform sound with data,” said music composition student <strong>Jessie Lausé</strong> (MMus’23).&nbsp;</p><p>The lab residents come from a variety of disciplines, their interests overlapping like a Venn diagram — from music students seeking to create experimental compositions to engineering students interested in a more artistic expression of their work. The thing they have in common is a desire for interdisciplinary innovation.&nbsp;</p><p>“It’s super exciting for a student with an electrical engineering background to be able to apply the technical skills that they have to brain waves or a medical question or to a creative pursuit,” said Leslie. “I’m constantly astounded by the work that they’re doing. They surprise me every day.”&nbsp;</p><h2>Hyperscanning</h2><p>PhD candidate <strong>Thiago Roque</strong> (PhDCreatTechCogSciNeuroSci’27) is investigating the phenomenon of neural entrainment in musical settings to better understand social interaction and empathy.</p><p>His current research is centered on hyperscanning (a procedure that records activity in two brains at the same time) during a musical performance to better understand the neurological link between performers and audience, as well as between performers themselves.&nbsp;</p><p>“We are trying to measure the engagement and the connection between the audience and the musicians,” he said. “It’s this fundamentally different way of saying that musical communication is an interbody experience, and then measuring the brain waves that would result from that.&nbsp;</p><p>“The whole idea is to operationalize how two brains find synchrony while someone is playing music and the other one is listening.”&nbsp;</p><p>He hopes this set of research will help inform how we understand empathy — by watching how people interact with each other in nonverbal ways.&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="ucb-article-content ucb-striped-content"> <div class="container"> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--article-content paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div class="ucb-article-content-media ucb-article-content-media-above"> <div> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--media paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div> <div class="imageMediaStyle large_image_style"> <img loading="lazy" src="/coloradan/sites/default/files/styles/large_image_style/public/2024-10/11-05-2014_v2_ag.jpg?itok=b-0emrVy" width="1500" height="563" alt="Sound of Science Banner"> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="ucb-article-text d-flex align-items-center" itemprop="articleBody"> <div><h2>Found Objects</h2><div class="feature-layout-callout feature-layout-callout-medium"><div class="ucb-callout-content"><blockquote><p><strong>“I really like this idea of not needing to know how to play an instrument to engage in music.”</strong></p></blockquote></div></div><p>Lausé is focusing on creating experimental works using sound from “found objects” rather than traditional instruments. Elements of a piece might include pouring out a bucket of water, ripping up crisp sheets of paper or dropping floor tiles from a height of five feet. A recent piece featured Lausé peeling a butternut squash alongside a saxophone quartet.</p><p>“I’m interested in anything that makes a good sound,” said Lausé. “I was pursuing this idea that within an object is everything you need to play this piece of music. It has an intuitive nature.”</p><p>At a macro level, Lausé’s work centers on accessibility.</p><p>“I really like this idea of not needing to know how to play an instrument to engage in music,” they said. “I didn’t grow up thinking that I was going to be in classical music or in academia. That was never something that was an accessible thought to me growing up.”</p><p>Lausé hopes this work will appeal to people who may not traditionally be encouraged to pursue revolutionary ideas.&nbsp;</p><p>“I think a lot of what I want to do in my work is break some kind of barrier,” they said. “For me, it’s a matter of putting experimental art and process and creativity on display so that more people know it’s possible for them.”</p><h2>An Interdisciplinary Community</h2><p>For Leslie, interdisciplinary work has always been second nature. Raised by a physicist and a musician, she was encouraged from an early age to fuse her interests together. However, she’s found that the rest of the world tends to relegate skill sets to their own separate industries.</p><p>Leslie’s hope has been to create a lab that ushers traditionally disconnected fields into the same room. When she came across ŷڱƵ Boulder’s ATLAS Institute, it felt like the perfect fit.</p><p>“ATLAS is a truly, truly unique place,” said Leslie. “Experimental work is impossible without the support of others in other disciplines. And when you are able to build a little world to support that work, I think what comes out of it is very special.”</p><p>As the lab moves forward at ŷڱƵ, Leslie hopes it will become a place where more and more students and their work will find an expression.</p><p>Is it art? Is it science? At the Brain Music Lab, the answer is simply, “Yes.”&nbsp;</p><p><a class="ucb-link-button ucb-link-button-gold ucb-link-button-regular ucb-link-button-default" href="/coloradan/submit-your-feedback" rel="nofollow"><span class="ucb-link-button-contents"><i class="fa-solid fa-pencil">&nbsp;</i>&nbsp;Submit feedback to the editor</span></a></p><hr><div><div><div><div><div><div><div><div><div><div><p>Illustrations by Andy Gilmore</p></div></div></div></div></div></div></div></div></div></div><div><div><hr></div></div></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div>The Brain-Music lab fuses neuroscience with music, technology and engineering. The result? An interdisciplinary community producing revolutionary art grounded in empathy and human connection.</div> <h2> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--ucb-related-articles-block paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div>Related Articles</div> </div> </h2> <div>Traditional</div> <div>0</div> <a href="/coloradan/summer-2023" hreflang="und">Summer 2023</a> <div>On</div> <div>White</div> Mon, 10 Jul 2023 08:00:00 +0000 Anonymous 11966 at /coloradan The ŷڱƵ Scientist Cracking the Love Code /coloradan/Zoe-Donaldson-love-chemistry-brain-voles <span>The ŷڱƵ Scientist Cracking the Love Code</span> <span><span>Anonymous (not verified)</span></span> <span><time datetime="2019-06-03T11:21:47-06:00" title="Monday, June 3, 2019 - 11:21">Mon, 06/03/2019 - 11:21</time> </span> <div> <div class="imageMediaStyle focal_image_wide"> <img loading="lazy" src="/coloradan/sites/default/files/styles/focal_image_wide/public/article-thumbnail/screen_shot_2019-05-20_at_4.14.06_pm.png?h=64c89b82&amp;itok=2Hrj7Nt8" width="1200" height="600" alt="Praire Voles on top of a wedding cake"> </div> </div> <div role="contentinfo" class="container ucb-article-categories" itemprop="about"> <span class="visually-hidden">Categories:</span> <div class="ucb-article-category-icon" aria-hidden="true"> <i class="fa-solid fa-folder-open"></i> </div> <a href="/coloradan/taxonomy/term/1085"> Science &amp; Health </a> </div> <div role="contentinfo" class="container ucb-article-tags" itemprop="keywords"> <span class="visually-hidden">Tags:</span> <div class="ucb-article-tag-icon" aria-hidden="true"> <i class="fa-solid fa-tags"></i> </div> <a href="/coloradan/taxonomy/term/1203" hreflang="en">Love</a> <a href="/coloradan/taxonomy/term/1205" hreflang="en">Neuroscience</a> </div> <a href="/coloradan/lisa-marshall">Lisa Marshall</a> <div class="ucb-article-content ucb-striped-content"> <div class="container"> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--article-content paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div class="ucb-article-content-media ucb-article-content-media-above"> <div> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--media paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div> <div class="imageMediaStyle large_image_style"> <img loading="lazy" src="/coloradan/sites/default/files/styles/large_image_style/public/article-image/pentagram_final_02-send_1.jpg?itok=q8SH757P" width="1500" height="2887" alt="Voles feature illustration"> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="ucb-article-text d-flex align-items-center" itemprop="articleBody"> <div><p class="hero">Intrepid brain scientist Zoe Donaldson and an army of furry rodents are decoding life's most complex emotions.</p> <hr> <p>Observing a family of prairie voles scurrying around their nest, you can’t help but feel like you’re in the presence of kindred spirits.<br> <br> With fuzzy round faces, tiny ears and wide eyes that occasionally connect with yours, the palm-sized rodents tempt you to pick them up and cuddle them. But it’s the bonds they form with one another that make them of keen interest to us.<br> <br> Like humans — and only three-to-five percent of all mammal species — they mate for life, forming a lasting connection with partners and sticking together to raise their plentiful offspring. They even experience something akin to grief when they lose their significant other.<br> <br> Zoe Donaldson, a ŷڱƵ assistant professor of behavioral neuroscience, wants to know why.<br> <br> “If you think about some of the most important events that take place in life, they fall around our social relationships: We fall in love, we get married, we have kids, we lose someone. But what makes these events possible?” she asks as she looks upon a family of six prairie voles playfully chasing each other through a cardboard tube in her lab. “From a neurobiological perspective, what do you need to form a bond, maintain a bond and overcome a loss?”<br> <br> A rising scientific star, Donaldson is among a small group of scientists working to answer this question, in hopes of helping people who struggle to make powerful emotional connections.<br> <br> For those with autism, which impacts 1 in 59 children, for instance, forming close social bonds can be extremely challenging. At the other end of the spectrum, separation anxiety disorder leads to emotional attachments so intense that they’re detrimental. And for those with a condition called “complicated grief,” loss of a loved one can lead to profound emotional pain that doesn’t fade with time.<br> <br> In contrast to depression, which centers on individual thoughts and feelings, conditions related to social bonding are understudied and nearly impossible to treat with medication, said Dr. Katherine Shear, a Columbia University psychiatrist who specializes in bereavement.<br> <br> “Close attachments contribute importantly to many of the psychological problems individuals face, yet there is very little research informing this question of what happens in the brain when we form or lose them,” said Shear. “Zoe’s research promises to fill the gap.”<br> <br> By observing prairie voles and comparing them to their more promiscuous cousins, such as meadow voles, Donaldson and others have zeroed in on two key hormones — oxytocin and vasopressin.<br> <br> Now, with several million dollars in federal grants, she’s expanding her lab and vole colony to learn precisely what those chemicals do and where in the brain they do them. In short, she’s on a mission to decode love.&nbsp;</p> <h3><br> <strong>Loss, Love and Learning&nbsp;</strong></h3> <p>Donaldson was a precocious 17-year-old when she experienced what she now recalls as “a profoundly horrible feeling.”<br> <br> She’d been with a boyfriend for just three months. When he dumped her, she was heartbroken — but also intrigued.<br> <br> “It was the most intense thing I’d ever felt before,” she said of the day she first had an inkling of what she wanted to do for work. “And on some level I thought, ‘I want to understand this better.’”<br> <br> Raised in Reno, Nev., in a family of scientists and tinkerers, Donaldson had always been a deep thinker.<br> <br> She left high school at 16 to attend a liberal arts college in Massachusetts, and by 20 had spent time in West Africa researching malaria and finished her undergraduate degree, at UCLA. At 21, she was working on a doctorate in neuroscience at Emory University. There, she was mentored by social neuroscientist Larry Young, a pioneer in prairie vole research.<br> <br> Voles’ monogamy was discovered in the 1970s, when a biologist doing population surveys in Illinois noticed that the same male and female pairs kept showing up together in his traps. Their cousins the meadow voles sleep around, and their female hamster cousins occasionally eat their mates after sex. So the discovery of amorous and faithful rodents was greeted as a scientific gift.<br> <br> “Typical rodents don’t form these attachments like we do, so for a long time these emotions were really difficult to study,” says Donaldson. As she dug into her research at Emory, she had another moment of inspiration.<br> <br> She’d just had a tonsillectomy and was violently ill, but her then-beau, now-husband, Kyle Allen, stuck around anyway, fielding calls from the doctor and cleaning up after her.<br> <br> She knew that day he was the one. “I was like, ‘this is someone who is going to do everything possible for me when I need it the most,’” she recalls. “It was a rational realization, but on a deeply emotional level.”<br> <br> Scientifically speaking, she was fascinated by the idea that it probably also had a lot to do with the neurochemicals which flooded the reward centers in her brain when he was around.<br> <br> When prairie voles, aka <em>Microtus ochrogaster</em>, couple up for the first time, research has shown, oxytocin (a hormone associated with trust, understanding social cues and maternal bonding) is released in a brain region called the nucleus accumbens. Vasopressin (a hormone that makes our blood pressure rise and warms us up) is released in a region called the ventral pallidum.<br> <br> After an initial bond is forged, the animals associate the significant other with that feel-good sensation and keep coming back for more.<br> <br> Brain imaging studies suggest a similar phenomenon may be at play in humans.<br> <br> “The idea is that when you see that special someone again, you get a little reward juice and certain cells light up in these reward centers,” said Donaldson, noting that they happen to be the same centers that light up when people use heroin or cocaine.<br> <br> In a way, she says, the term “addicted to love” may not be so far off.</p> <h3><strong>From Lab To Practice</strong></h3> <p>Since moving to ŷڱƵ Boulder in 2016, Donaldson has been flooded with accolades, including the NIH Director’s New Innovator Award, and received more than $2.4 million in research grants.<br> <br> By filming and observing how prairie voles behave around one another and using state-of-the-art neuroimaging tools to see what happens in their brains when they are with (and without) their mates, she hopes to understand not just which neurochemicals are at play, but precisely which switches they’re turning on in which regions of the brain.<br> <br> Both promiscuous meadow voles and monogamous prairie voles have oxytocin and vasopressin coursing through their little bodies, she said. But prairie voles appear to have more and differently distributed receptors in their brains’ reward centers. “The difference between them is not whether they produce these hormones, but rather what they can unlock within their brains,” she said. “We’re working to find that out.”<br> <br> Meanwhile, researchers at several universities have begun experimenting with intranasal oxytocin in autistic children. At least one university is using it in couple’s therapy. Others are exploring its role in complicated grief.<br> <br> Donaldson is quick to note that the science is young: We’re still far from discovering a “Love Potion Number 9.”<br> <br> But she does imagine a day when her discoveries could help lead to new drugs, counseling strategies and even diagnostic tools that use brain imaging to see if a treatment is really working to ignite the brain pathways required to form a bond.<br> <br> In the meantime, she and her husband have gotten used to snarky questions about their love life and frequent jokes about their oxytocin levels. Does knowing so much about the neurochemistry of love somehow make it less romantic for her?<br> <br> Absolutely not.<br> <br> “Are you really going to feel any less in love if I tell you that it is just a bunch of chemicals in your brain making you feel that way?” she said as a pair of prairie voles snuggled nearby. “I don’t. If anything, it gives me an even greater appreciation for it.”<br> <br> <em>In our print edition, this story appears under the title "Cracking the Love Code."&nbsp;Comment on this story? Email&nbsp;<a href="mailto:editor@colorado.edu" rel="nofollow">editor@colorado.edu</a>.</em><br> <br> Illustration by Bill Mayer.</p></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div>Intrepid brain scientist Zoe Donaldson and an army of furry rodents are decoding life's most complex emotions.</div> <h2> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--ucb-related-articles-block paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div>Off</div> </div> </h2> <div>Traditional</div> <div>0</div> <div>On</div> <div>White</div> Mon, 03 Jun 2019 17:21:47 +0000 Anonymous 9235 at /coloradan