Recognising the level of commitment and whether you love your partner or are only attached to them is critical for the future of your relationship. Is your love obsessive? What are the main differences? Is real love actually selfless?
(Image caption:
The two networks related to the perception of the external world and
internal thoughts (in blue and red respectively) show a pathological
communication in disorders of consciousness)
Over the past few years, a great amount of scientific research has
shown that even when the brain is “at rest” it still works. The brains
of healthy people are organized into regions displaying similar
activity, called resting-state networks. There are two networks related
to the perception of either the external world or internal thoughts. So
far, much research on consciousness has focused on the activity within
these networks, rather than how they communicate between each other.
An international research team has now investigated their
interactions in different states of consciousness and has discovered
that patients with severely impaired consciousness (disorders of
consciousness, e.g. vegetative state/unresponsive wakefulness syndrome
and minimally conscious state) show a pathological or uncontrolled
communication between the two networks. Conversely, in patients who
recovered from disorders of consciousness (patients known as emerging
from minimally conscious state) the habitual interactions between
networks are partially preserved, despite there being no difference in
the connectivity within each network.
The study, published by the high-impact journal The Lancet
Neurology, was led by Carol Di Perri, researcher at the Coma Science
Group at Université de Liège (Belgium), and coordinated by Athena
Demertzi, Steven Laureys (Coma Science Group) and Andrea Soddu from
Western University (London, Ontario, Canada).
“Our findings cast light on the mechanisms underlying neural
function necessary to emerge from impaired consciousness states and,
more generally, on the importance of these network interactions in the
emergence of higher cognitive functions,” says Laureys, Director, Coma
Science Group and principal investigator at the GIGA (Interdisciplinary
Cluster for Applied Geno-proteomics) of Liège. “Such results will have
relevant impact in the clinical setting and may lead to possible new
therapeutic options.”
According to Di Perri, previous research into disorders of
consciousness predominantly focused on the connectivity breakdown within
these networks, rather than their functional interactions.
“This study suggests that communication between networks is more
important than connectivity within networks for cognitive functions
necessary to emerge from disorders of consciousness,” says Di Perri.
Soddu, an assistant professor at Western’s Department of Physics and
Astronomy and a member of the world-renowned Brain and Mind Institute,
further explains, “This important discovery shows that the two neural
networks interact in a competing ways within the human brain, making
patients emerging from minimally conscious state swing between the
perception of the external world and their internal thoughts in an
integrated manner.”
I am dying to see you.
I am dying to talk to you.
I am dying to hold you in my arms.
I am dying to tell you that I love you.
I am dying…because of you.