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Plasticity and language in the anaesthetized human hippocampus

108 pointsby hhsyesterday at 11:06 PM43 commentsview on HN

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-026-10448-0


Comments

tgvtoday at 6:38 AM

This sounds odd to me:

> ... neural signals could predict upcoming words in a sentence. ... This kind of predictive coding is something we associate with being awake and attentive, yet it’s happening here in an unconscious state

In psycholinguistics, the assumption is, and always has been, that language processing is unconscious, a background process like visual object recognition. For starters, conscious attention is too slow by two orders of magnitude, and infants can process language, while presumably not yet (fully) conscious.

slicktuxtoday at 1:06 AM

I sometimes ge the most complex logical dreams whilst going to sleep on a programming problem. The dreams are normal dreams but structured like a programming problem or logic…it’s like my brain is trying to dream normally but it’s also Fixated on programming logic so it subliminally incorporates it into dreams. Then I wake up and I feel like I’ve compiled the whole code in my head and did not rest.

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healthworkertoday at 12:56 AM

This is strong evidence against LLMs experiencing qualia. (I know that that topic often gets people laughed out of the room but please don't jump on me for engaging in that debate. When we can collect evidence and be able to show it to people.)

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johnbarrontoday at 12:49 AM

This is not new. Read Phantoms in the Brain

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phantoms_in_the_Brain

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jdw64today at 1:47 AM

If that mechanism can be activated, it may significantly compress the time required for education and learning.

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pstuarttoday at 12:47 AM

I guess this makes sense -- a brain is gonna do brain stuff. The only difference is that we're not present to witness it.

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westurnertoday at 2:23 AM

ScholarlyArticle: "Plasticity and language in the anaesthetized human hippocampus" (2026) https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-026-10448-0

Sleep-learning https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sleep-learning

Also, Sleep and learning https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sleep_and_learning

alexfromapextoday at 12:52 AM

I would think anesthesia, in specific doses, would only attenuate consciousness...if it stopped other processes your organs and nervous system would stop. I guess this confirms that.

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