What Is a Neural Network in the Brain? How Brains Operate

This article is an excerpt from the Shortform book guide to "Seven and a Half Lessons About the Brain" by Lisa Feldman Barrett. Shortform has the world's best summaries and analyses of books you should be reading.

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What is a neural network in the brain? What does the neural network do?

Rather than a simple and static three-layer structure, Lisa Feldman Barrett says the brain is a complex and active web of neurons. Put simply, neurons are the messengers of the brain in a neural network.

Read below for a breakdown of the neural network in the brain, as explained in Seven and a Half Lessons About the Brain.

The Brain Is a Network

What is a neural network in the brain? Neural networks compromise of neurons that handle information. They take in information and transmit electrical impulses to each other to communicate what is happening and how the body should react. For example, if you touch a hot stove, the neurons in your brain would receive that data and instantly tell your body to pull your hand back. Barrett goes on to explain that neurons form clusters and share information with each other. We can imagine these clusters as a group of people talking. Some of the neurons in those clusters communicate with other clusters in the vicinity (like neighbors chatting in the front yard). Some clusters are bigger and more powerful than others (such as people who have a public forum or social influence).

And some clusters communicate with other clusters across the brain, not just the ones nearby (as in email, a phone call, or on social media). In this way, the entire brain shares information and participates in shaping your experiences and behaviors.

(Shortform note: It might seem from this description that neurons are the only stars of the brain show, but there are other important cells in the brain that allow neurons to do their work: glial cells. Their name comes from the Greek word for glue, which makes sense because they help neurons build connections with each other to share information. In addition, they identify and destroy injured neurons so new ones can crop up.)

Characteristics of the Brain

As we’ve seen, brains are made up of neurons that get together to form clusters and share information. Barrett says that, as the foundational element of brains, neurons give brains two important characteristics: plasticity and complexity.

1. Plasticity

Plasticity refers to the brain’s capacity for constant change. Neurons continuously learn new information, age, die, and get replaced. This doesn’t mean that the information those neurons contained disappears, though. Other neurons preserve that information in case you need it in the future.

Similarly, neural connections that aren’t getting used become less agile while those that are exercised often become stronger, just like your muscles. That’s why you have a hard time remembering and using any information you only heard once. But if you go back to the information several times, that connection will become stronger and easier to retrieve and apply.

Neurons can also learn to perform new tasks if necessary. They don’t naturally have one specific job. Instead, they can all perform a range of different tasks but end up performing the specific functions we need them to do. For example, Barrett explains that if a person loses one of their senses, such as their eyesight, the neurons that process visual input can quickly learn to process other sensory input. This is why a blind person’s sense of touch is heightened, which helps them read braille.

You can think of your brain as an orchestra and neurons as the individual musicians. Plasticity gives musicians (neurons) the ability to learn new music and play more than one instrument (just as neurons are capable of having more than one job). But if they stop practicing, they become rusty.

What Is a Neural Network in the Brain? How Brains Operate

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Here's what you'll find in our full Seven and a Half Lessons About the Brain summary:

  • How the human brain develops and operates
  • Why the brain isn't organized in the way you thought it was
  • How brains collaborate with one another

Katie Doll

Somehow, Katie was able to pull off her childhood dream of creating a career around books after graduating with a degree in English and a concentration in Creative Writing. Her preferred genre of books has changed drastically over the years, from fantasy/dystopian young-adult to moving novels and non-fiction books on the human experience. Katie especially enjoys reading and writing about all things television, good and bad.

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