My personal wish to see ORISSA, my home state as India's most progressive in social, Economic & cultural factor. Better than average life expectancy, Internet, Literacy rate, Standard of living, Happiness quotient of people, everything! We should be seen as a "ROLE MODEL" to our peer states. Also to see my hometown "BHUBANESWAR" evolve in to a global city like London, Paris & Shanghai. Which means of having great infrastructure like roads, shopping malls, airports & large skyscrapers. Being the hometown to many mega corporation that employ many people & own great wealth & most important a unique culture of its own which it denizens are identified with. I wish to contribute to this in my own little way.

Monday, May 10, 2010

A Drug That Could Give You Perfect Visual Memory



Imagine if you could look at something once and remember it forever. You would never have to ask for directions again. Now a group of scientists has isolated a protein that mega-boosts your ability to remember what you see.
A group of Spanish researchers reported today in Science that they may have stumbled upon a substance that could become the ultimate memory-enhancer. The group was studying a poorly-understood region of the visual cortex. They found that if they boosted production of a protein called RGS-14 (pictured) in that area of the visual cortex in mice, it dramatically affected the animals' ability to remember objects they had seen.
Mice with the RGS-14 boost could remember objects they had seen for up to two months. Ordinarily the same mice would only be able to remember these objects for about one hour.
The researchers concluded that this region of the visual cortex, known as layer six of region V2, is responsible for creating visual memories. When the region is removed, mice can no longer remember any object they see.
If this protein boosts visual memory in humans, the implications are staggering. In their paper, the researchers say that it could be used as a memory-enhancer – which seems like an understatement. What's particularly intriguing is the fact that this protein works on visual memory only. So as I mentioned earlier, it would be perfect for mapping. It would also be useful for engineers and architects who need to hold a lot of visual images in their minds at once. And it would also be a great drug for detective and spies.
Could it also be a way to gain photographic memory? For example, if I look at a page of text will I remember the words perfectly? Or will I simply remember how the page looked?
I can't see much of a downside for this potential drug, unless the act of not forgetting what you see causes problems or trauma.

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