• About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Spinal Cord Injury Videos
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
Friday, January 23, 2026
Rajesh Spinal Injury
  • Home
  • Spinal Cord Injury
    • Quadriplegia
    • Paraplegia
    •  SCI Levels & Functions
    • Latest Breakthrough in SCI
    • Spinal Cord Injury Research
    • Spinal Cord Injury Videos
  • Rehabilitation
    • Physiotherapy and Occupational Therapy
    • Brain & Spine Chip Implants
    •  Epidural Stimulation
    • Stem Cell Therapy
    •  Spinal Cord Injury Drugs
  • Latest SCI News
    Spinal cord injuries in Gaza risk permanent disability for children

    Spinal cord injuries in Gaza risk permanent disability for children

    EEG technology could be a useful tool for linking brain signals with limb movements

    EEG technology could be a useful tool for linking brain signals with limb movements

    The first stage of testing of a drug aimed at complete spinal cord injury is approved in Brazil – 05/01/2026 – Science and Health

    The first stage of testing of a drug aimed at complete spinal cord injury is approved in Brazil – 05/01/2026 – Science and Health

    Injectable nanomaterials reduce secondary brain damage after ischemic stroke

    Injectable nanomaterials reduce secondary brain damage after ischemic stroke

    3 reflections from Dennis Prager after spinal cord injury

    3 reflections from Dennis Prager after spinal cord injury

    recovery is more difficult for older people with spinal cord injury | Housing

    recovery is more difficult for older people with spinal cord injury | Housing

    Study reveals how the nervous system activates repair after spinal cord injury

    Study reveals how the nervous system activates repair after spinal cord injury

    How does age affect recovery from spinal cord injury?

    How does age affect recovery from spinal cord injury?

    Older age influences functional recovery after spinal cord injury

    Older age influences functional recovery after spinal cord injury

  • Spine
    • Spinal Cord Injury Ai
  • Health News
    The growth of Inside Life Medical from a single service to a broader medical ecosystem

    The growth of Inside Life Medical from a single service to a broader medical ecosystem

    The United States officially leaves the World Health Organization

    The United States officially leaves the World Health Organization

    How an Underactive Thyroid Destroys Your Energy and Metabolism

    How an Underactive Thyroid Destroys Your Energy and Metabolism

    New owners of Crozer-Chester Medical Center plan to restore essential healthcare services to Delaware County

    New owners of Crozer-Chester Medical Center plan to restore essential healthcare services to Delaware County

    ‘The public sector must play a dominant role in healthcare’ | India News

    ‘The public sector must play a dominant role in healthcare’ | India News

    Common Triggers, Symptom Patterns, and Relief Strategies

    Common Triggers, Symptom Patterns, and Relief Strategies

    American Indians hold free MLK Day health camp in Boston

    American Indians hold free MLK Day health camp in Boston

    7 Subtle Signs Caregivers Miss (And How to Prevent Them)

    7 Subtle Signs Caregivers Miss (And How to Prevent Them)

    Beyond prevention: Routine vaccines offer surprising health benefits for older adults

    Beyond prevention: Routine vaccines offer surprising health benefits for older adults

  • Weight Loss Ai
  • More
    • NeuroScience
    • Brain Computer Interface
    • Diet-Nutrition
    • Spinal Cord Injury Videos
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Spinal Cord Injury
    • Quadriplegia
    • Paraplegia
    •  SCI Levels & Functions
    • Latest Breakthrough in SCI
    • Spinal Cord Injury Research
    • Spinal Cord Injury Videos
  • Rehabilitation
    • Physiotherapy and Occupational Therapy
    • Brain & Spine Chip Implants
    •  Epidural Stimulation
    • Stem Cell Therapy
    •  Spinal Cord Injury Drugs
  • Latest SCI News
    Spinal cord injuries in Gaza risk permanent disability for children

    Spinal cord injuries in Gaza risk permanent disability for children

    EEG technology could be a useful tool for linking brain signals with limb movements

    EEG technology could be a useful tool for linking brain signals with limb movements

    The first stage of testing of a drug aimed at complete spinal cord injury is approved in Brazil – 05/01/2026 – Science and Health

    The first stage of testing of a drug aimed at complete spinal cord injury is approved in Brazil – 05/01/2026 – Science and Health

    Injectable nanomaterials reduce secondary brain damage after ischemic stroke

    Injectable nanomaterials reduce secondary brain damage after ischemic stroke

    3 reflections from Dennis Prager after spinal cord injury

    3 reflections from Dennis Prager after spinal cord injury

    recovery is more difficult for older people with spinal cord injury | Housing

    recovery is more difficult for older people with spinal cord injury | Housing

    Study reveals how the nervous system activates repair after spinal cord injury

    Study reveals how the nervous system activates repair after spinal cord injury

    How does age affect recovery from spinal cord injury?

    How does age affect recovery from spinal cord injury?

    Older age influences functional recovery after spinal cord injury

    Older age influences functional recovery after spinal cord injury

  • Spine
    • Spinal Cord Injury Ai
  • Health News
    The growth of Inside Life Medical from a single service to a broader medical ecosystem

    The growth of Inside Life Medical from a single service to a broader medical ecosystem

    The United States officially leaves the World Health Organization

    The United States officially leaves the World Health Organization

    How an Underactive Thyroid Destroys Your Energy and Metabolism

    How an Underactive Thyroid Destroys Your Energy and Metabolism

    New owners of Crozer-Chester Medical Center plan to restore essential healthcare services to Delaware County

    New owners of Crozer-Chester Medical Center plan to restore essential healthcare services to Delaware County

    ‘The public sector must play a dominant role in healthcare’ | India News

    ‘The public sector must play a dominant role in healthcare’ | India News

    Common Triggers, Symptom Patterns, and Relief Strategies

    Common Triggers, Symptom Patterns, and Relief Strategies

    American Indians hold free MLK Day health camp in Boston

    American Indians hold free MLK Day health camp in Boston

    7 Subtle Signs Caregivers Miss (And How to Prevent Them)

    7 Subtle Signs Caregivers Miss (And How to Prevent Them)

    Beyond prevention: Routine vaccines offer surprising health benefits for older adults

    Beyond prevention: Routine vaccines offer surprising health benefits for older adults

  • Weight Loss Ai
  • More
    • NeuroScience
    • Brain Computer Interface
    • Diet-Nutrition
    • Spinal Cord Injury Videos
No Result
View All Result
Spinal Cord Injury
No Result
View All Result
Home NeuroScience

Thinking begins before we are born

Editor's by Editor's
November 28, 2025
in NeuroScience
0
0
Thinking begins before we are born

Summary: New research using human brain organoids shows that early neural activity follows structured time-based patterns long before sensory experience begins. These findings suggest that the human brain comes preconfigured with a built-in “operating system” to organize information, rather than relying solely on external inputs to form its circuits.

The organoids produced complex activity signatures that resemble the brain’s default mode, suggesting a genetically encoded model for perception and cognition. The work opens the door to deeper insights into early brain development, neurodevelopmental disorders, and how toxins can affect the fetal brain.

Key facts:

Intrinsically patterned activity: The organoids produced organized neuronal activation patterns that resembled the brain’s default mode network despite no sensory input. Genetically encoded blueprint: Findings suggest that the brain begins to form circuits with built-in instructions before experience shapes them. Tool for understanding disorders: These early signatures can help identify developmental alterations related to diseases or toxic exposures.

Source: UC Santa Cruz

Human beings have long wondered when and how we begin to form thoughts. Are we born with a prewired brain or do thought patterns only begin to emerge in response to our sensory experiences of the world around us?

Now, science is getting closer to answering the questions that philosophers have pondered for centuries.

Researchers at the University of California, Santa Cruz are using small models of human brain tissue, called organoids, to study the first moments of electrical activity in the brain.

A new study in Nature Neuroscience finds that early brain activations occur in structured patterns without any external experience, suggesting that the human brain is prewired with instructions on how to navigate and interact with the world.

“These cells clearly interact with each other and form circuits that self-assemble before we can experience anything from the outside world,” said Tal Sharf, assistant professor of biomolecular engineering in the Baskin School of Engineering and senior author of the study.

“There is an operating system that emerges in a primordial state. In my lab, we grow brain organoids to observe this primordial version of the brain’s operating system and study how the brain constructs itself before sensory experience shapes it.”

By improving our fundamental understanding of human brain development, these findings can help researchers better understand neurodevelopmental disorders and identify the impact of toxins such as pesticides and microplastics on the developing brain.

Studying the developing brain

The brain, similar to a computer, works with electrical signals – the activation of neurons. When these signals start firing and how the human brain develops are difficult topics for scientists to study, since the early developing human brain is protected inside the womb.

Organoids, which are 3D models of tissue grown from human stem cells in the laboratory, provide a unique window into brain development. The Braingeneers group at UC Santa Cruz, in collaboration with researchers at UC San Francisco and UC Santa Barbara, are pioneering methods for growing these models and taking measurements from them to gain insights into brain development and disorders.

Organoids are particularly useful for understanding whether the brain develops in response to sensory information (since they exist in the laboratory and not in the body) and can be ethically grown in large quantities.

In this study, researchers prompted stem cells to form brain tissue and then measured their electrical activity using specialized microchips, similar to those that run a computer. Sharf’s background in applied physics, computing, and neurobiology informs his expertise in modeling early brain circuitry.

“An organoid system that is intrinsically uncoupled from any sensory information or communication with the organs offers a window into what is happening with this self-assembly process,” Sharf said.

“That self-assembly process is really difficult to do with traditional 2D cell culture: you can’t get cellular diversity and architecture. Cells need to be in intimate contact with each other. We’re trying to control the initial conditions, so we can let biology do its wonderful work.”

Pattern production

The researchers observed the electrical activity of brain tissue as it self-assembled from stem cells into a tissue that can translate the senses and produce language and conscious thought.

They discovered that during the first months of development, long before the human brain is capable of receiving and processing complex external sensory information such as vision and hearing, its cells spontaneously began to emit electrical signals characteristic of the patterns underlying sensory translation.

Through decades of neuroscience research, the community has discovered that neurons fire in patterns that are not simply random. Instead, the brain has a “default mode”: a basic underlying structure for activating neurons that then becomes more specific as the brain processes unique signals like a smell or taste. This background mode describes the possible range of sensory responses that the body and brain can produce.

In their observations of individual neuron spikes in self-assembled organoid models, Sharf and his colleagues found that these early observable patterns bear a striking similarity to the brain’s default mode.

Even without having received any sensory input, they are activating a complex repertoire of time-based patterns or sequences, which have the potential to be refined for specific senses, hinting at a genetically encoded blueprint inherent to the neural architecture of the living brain.

“These intrinsically self-organizing systems could serve as a basis for building a representation of the world around us,” Sharf said.

“The fact that we can see them in these early stages suggests that evolution has discovered a way for the central nervous system to construct a map that would allow us to navigate and interact with the world.”

Knowing that these organoids produce the basic structure of the living brain opens a range of possibilities to better understand human neurodevelopment, diseases, and the effects of toxins on the brain.

“We are showing that there is a basis for capturing complex dynamics that could likely be signals of pathological onsets that we could study in human tissue,” Sharf said. “That would allow us to develop therapies, working with clinicians at a preclinical level to potentially develop compounds, drug therapies and gene editing tools that could be cheaper, more efficient and higher performing.”

Researchers from UC Santa Barbara, Washington University in St. Louis, Johns Hopkins University, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, and ETH Zurich participated in this study.

Key questions answered:

Q: What do brain organoids reveal about early neuronal activity?

A: They show structured electrical patterns that emerge before any sensory input.

Q: Does the brain form circuits without experience?

A: Yes, organoids self-assemble into networks that fire in coordinated patterns.

Q: Why is this important for neurodevelopment?

A: These early intrinsic patterns can shape the way the brain builds systems for feeling, learning, and thinking.

Editorial notes:

This article was edited by a Neuroscience News editor. Magazine article reviewed in its entirety. Additional context added by our staff.

About this neurodevelopment research news

Author: Emily Cerf
Source: UC Santa Cruz
Contact: Emily Cerf – UC Santa Cruz
Image: Image is credited to Neuroscience News.

Original Research: Closed access.
“Preconfigured neuronal activation sequences in human brain organoids” by Tal Sharf et al. Nature Neuroscience

Abstract

Preconfigured neuronal activation sequences in human brain organoids

Neuronal firing sequences are believed to be the building blocks of information and transmission within the brain. However, it is still unclear when these sequences arise during neurological development.

Here we demonstrate that structured firing sequences appear in the spontaneous activity of human and murine brain organoids, both unguided and directed by forebrain identity, as well as ex vivo neonatal murine cortical slices.

We observed temporally rigid and flexible activation patterns in human and murine brain organoids and early postnatal murine somatosensory cortex, but not in dissociated primary cortical cultures.

These results suggest that temporal sequences do not arise in an experience-dependent manner, but rather are constrained by a preconfigured architecture established during neurodevelopment.

By demonstrating developmental recapitulation of neuronal activation patterns, these findings highlight the potential of brain organoids as a model for neuronal circuit assembly.

ShareTweetSendShare
Editor's

Editor's

Related Posts

Early intervention helps most autistic children acquire spoken language
NeuroScience

Early intervention helps most autistic children acquire spoken language

January 23, 2026
0
Brain conductors find precise connection to target cells through protein handshake
NeuroScience

Brain conductors find precise connection to target cells through protein handshake

January 14, 2026
3
Multilingualism Calculator Reveals True Language Strengths
NeuroScience

Multilingualism Calculator Reveals True Language Strengths

January 5, 2026
0
The brain combines fast and slow signals to shape human thinking
NeuroScience

The brain combines fast and slow signals to shape human thinking

January 3, 2026
0
Immune Signal Index May Predict Progressive Multiple Sclerosis
NeuroScience

Immune Signal Index May Predict Progressive Multiple Sclerosis

January 2, 2026
1
AI brain model shows how neurons learn and where they fail
NeuroScience

AI brain model shows how neurons learn and where they fail

January 1, 2026
1
Load More
No Result
View All Result

Rajesh Logo14 White

Rajeshspinalinjury.com is the ‘Latest Spinal Cord Injury NEWS & Information’ website. 
Address:  Dhariwal, Gurdaspur, Punjab. India
Email: rajeshspinal@gmail.com

Categories

  • Brain Computer Interface
  • Diet & Nutrition
  • Epidural Stimulation
  • Health News
  • Latest SCI News
  • NeuroScience
  • SCI Research
  • Spinal Cord Injury Ai
  • Spine
  • Weight Loss Ai
No Result
View All Result

Recent News

The growth of Inside Life Medical from a single service to a broader medical ecosystem

The growth of Inside Life Medical from a single service to a broader medical ecosystem

January 23, 2026
Early intervention helps most autistic children acquire spoken language

Early intervention helps most autistic children acquire spoken language

January 23, 2026
  • Home
  • Spinal Cord Injury Videos
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Condition

RajeshSpinalInjury ©2025 || All Right Reserved. Design & Development by Rajesh

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Spinal Cord Injury
    •  SCI Levels & Functions
    • Latest Breakthrough in SCI
    •  Spinal Cord Injury Drugs
    • Spinal Cord Injury Research
  • Paraplegia
  • Quadriplegia
  • Rehabilitation
    • Brain & Spine Chip Implants
    • Physiotherapy and Occupational Therapy
    • Stem Cell Therapy
    •  Epidural Stimulation
  • Latest SCI News
  • Spine
    • Spinal Cord Injury Ai
  • NeuroScience
  • Brain Computer Interface
  • Health News
    • Diet & Nutrition
    • Weight Loss Ai
  • Spinal Cord Injury Videos
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

RajeshSpinalInjury ©2025 || All Right Reserved. Design & Development by Rajesh