Brain Capacity
The human brain has enough memory to hold three million hours of television.
If each neuron in the
brain could only help store a single memory, running out of space would be a
problem. You might have only a few gigabytes of storage space, similar to space
in an iPod or a USB flash drive. Yet neurons combine so that each one helps
with many memories at a time, exponentially increasing the brain's memory
storage capacity to something closer to around 2.5 petabytes (or a million
gigabytes).
For comparison, if
your brain worked like a digital video recorder in a television, 2.5 petabytes
would be enough to hold three million hours of TV shows. You would have to
leave the TV running continuously for more than 300 years to use up all that storage.
The Second Brain
The brain in your head is not your only
brain. There is a 'second brain' in your intestines that contains 100 million
neurons.
Ever wonder why you get cramps when you're
stressed? Or why you get "butterflies" in your stomach before a job
interview? And why your gut tells you not to trust a certain person?
Scientists say it's because the body has
two brains -- the familiar one encased in our skull and another more obscure
one in our gut. This "second brain," known as the enteric nervous
system, is located in our digestive tract and holds about 100-million nerve
cells- more than in our spinal cord.
Less complex and smaller than our cranial
brain, this "second brain," which contains between 70 to 85 percent
of the body's immune cells, is an independent data-processing center handling a
complicated circuitry of neurons, neuromodulators, and neurotransmitters.
"Every neurotransmitter that exists in
our brain also exists in the gut without exception. The brain in the gut is
simply the brain gone south," says Dr. Michael Gershon, author of The
Second Brain, and chairman of the department of anatomy and cell biology at
Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons.
In 1899, anatomists and physiologists
studying dogs found that, unlike any other reflex, the continuous push of
material through the digestive system continued after nerves linking the brain
to the intestines were severed. In other words, they discovered the gut had a
mind of its own.
Operating like our brain and looking uncannily
similar to it, the gut-brain responds to stimulus and is continuously active
whether we're aware of it or not. But it doesn't think or feel. The feeling is
held in the cerebral cortex of the brain. This "second brain"
performs a different role.
"The brain in the head deals with the
finer things in life: religion, philosophy, appreciation of art and music,
creativity, etc.," says Dr. Gershon. "Whereas the brain in the gut
deals with this dirty, messy and disgusting business of digestion. The brain in
the head doesn't have to get its hands dirty with that kind of thing since it
has delegated the job."
They may have different roles but our two
brains are interconnected. One thousand to 2,000 nerve fibers connect them and
enable the two to talk. When one gets upset, the other one does too.
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