Mind Reader
The microscope is a pathway to the mind for Patricia Goldman-Rakic, who has
spent the past 30 years immersed in the frontal lobe
By Amanda Bower
(TIME) -- The great irony of human intelligence is that the only species on
Earth capable of reason, complex-problem solving, long-term planning and
consciousness understands so little about the organ that makes it all possible
the brain. Scientists' knowledge of how and why the brain works is patchy
at best compared with their awareness of other vital body parts heart,
lungs, kidneys, skin.
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Patricia Goldman-Rakic Essentials
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Born: April 22, 1937, Salem, Massachusetts
Mentor: Haldor Rosvold at the National Institute of Mental Health, who
set up the first NIMH laboratory to study higher cortical function
Family Life: One of three sisters who all have a Ph.D. in science.
Married to Pasko Rakic, also a neuroscientist
Life Outside the Lab: Virtually none. "My life is devoted to science."
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Until Patricia Goldman-Rakic started delving into it, the most important part of
the brain, the frontal lobe, was a veritable blank sheet. A gray, wrinkled chunk
of tissue tucked behind the forehead and taking up about a third of the total
brain mass, it is to the rest of the central nervous system what a CEO is to a
modern corporation. It takes sensory data fed to it by the rest of the
organization (smells, sounds, tastes, etc.) and decides what it all means and
what should be done about it. It's largely responsible for our thinking,
planning, intellect and will.
Goldman-Rakic, a professor of neuroscience, neurology and psychiatry at Yale,
has spent the past 30 years immersed in the frontal lobe. In the early 1970s,
working at the National Institute of Mental Health as one of the few women in
the field, she became the first scientist to draw a comprehensive biological map
of neuroscience's terra incognita, showing that its tangled web of neurons is
actually a series of columns of highly specialized nerve cells.
But Goldman-Rakic is probably best known for her research on working memory,
which evolved out of these more fundamental discoveries. Working memory
functions in the brain like a yellow sticky Post-it note. It's the place we put
things to recall over the short term. We use working memory when we look up a
telephone number and remember it only long enough to dial. We use it on a more
basic level to remember the thread of an argument while we are trying to make a
point. A brain without working memory is like a computer without its RAM; its
computational abilities are crippled, as they often are in people with diseases
that affect the frontal lobe, such as cerebral palsy, dementia, Alzheimer's,
Parkinson's and schizophrenia.
But it's mostly the brains of monkeys, not humans, that Goldman-Rakic studies.
This presents certain advantages (monkey brains are extremely similar to ours,
and more invasive studies are allowed) and certain challenges. How, for
example, do you explore the memories of creatures that cannot speak?
Peanut and raisin rewards have become the coins of Goldman-Rakic's realm. In a
series of elegant experiments that combine memory tests with electrical
recordings from brain tissue, she has learned, for example, that each part of
the brain has its own short-term "scratch pad" in the frontal lobe. Within each
of these areas, individual neurons are responsible for holding and processing
highly specific pieces of information, like the memory of a particular face or
voice.
Despite Goldman-Rakic's best efforts, there is still probably as much we don't
know about the frontal lobe as we do. But she has helped open the door wider
for other scientists to explore, and given hope and new ideas to researchers
studying various conditions from drug abuse to Parkinson's that
affect memory. Psychologists in particular respect Goldman-Rakic for the way she
is constantly trying to bring psychology and biology closer together
thinking about the mind as a whole even while she is looking through a
microscope.
"She has a unique combination of technical rigor and creative intelligence,"
says Stephen Kosslyn, a professor of psychology at Harvard University.
At 64, Goldman-Rakic is as driven as a junior researcher just out of grad
school. Her next goal? "A theory of [the entire cerebral] cortical functional
architecture down to the level of individual neurons and functional circuits
would be very nice," she says. Nice, indeed.
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