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By News Staff | March 17th 2009 01:00 AM | 6 comments | Print | E-mail | Track Comments
They say a picture tells a thousand stories, but can it also tell how smart you are?  Yes, say UCLA researchers. 

In a Journal of Neuroscience study, UCLA neurology professor Paul Thompson and colleagues used a new type of brain-imaging scanner to show that intelligence is strongly influenced by the quality of the brain's axons, or wiring that sends signals throughout the brain. The faster the signaling, the faster the brain processes information. And since the integrity of the brain's wiring is influenced by genes, the genes we inherit play a far greater role in intelligence than was previously thought. 

Genes appear to influence intelligence by determining how well nerve axons are encased in myelin — the fatty sheath of "insulation" that coats our axons and allows for fast signaling bursts in our brains. The thicker the myelin, the faster the nerve impulses. 



Thompson and his colleagues scanned the brains of 23 sets of identical twins and 23 sets of fraternal twins. Since identical twins share the same genes while fraternal twins share about half their genes, the researchers were able to compare each group to show that myelin integrity was determined genetically in many parts of the brain that are key for intelligence. These include the parietal lobes, which are responsible for spatial reasoning, visual processing and logic, and the corpus callosum, which pulls together information from both sides of the body. 

The researchers used a faster version of a type of scanner called a HARDI (high-angular resolution diffusion imaging) — think of an MRI machine on steroids — that takes scans of the brain at a much higher resolution than a standard MRI. While an MRI scan shows the volume of different tissues in the brain by measuring the amount of water present, HARDI tracks how water diffuses through the brain's white matter — a way to measure the quality of its myelin.

"HARDI measures water diffusion," said Thompson, who is also a member of the UCLA Laboratory of Neuro-Imaging. "If the water diffuses rapidly in a specific direction, it tells us that the brain has very fast connections. If it diffuses more broadly, that's an indication of slower signaling, and lower intelligence." 

"So it gives us a picture of one's mental speed," he said. 

Because the myelination of brain circuits follows an inverted U-shaped trajectory, peaking in middle age and then slowly beginning to decline, Thompson believes identifying the genes that promote high-integrity myelin is critical to forestalling brain diseases like multiple sclerosis and autism, which have been linked to the breakdown of myelin. 

"The whole point of this research," Thompson said, "is to give us insight into brain diseases." 

He said his team has already narrowed down the number of gene candidates that may influence myelin growth. 

And could this someday lead to a therapy that could make us smarter, enhancing our intelligence? 

"It's a long way off but within the realm of the possible," Thompson said.


Comments

ricochet17's picture
We may enhance our intelligence, but if studies in Drosophila are any indication - there may be a cost in longevity.

Article on intelligence in flies

Life is never simple, is it?

logicman's picture
Michael, that's an interesting drosophila study.
Life is never simple, is it?


Only for John Horton Conway.

Very interesting, but a misleading title. Intelligence is more than a simple function of processing speed. One can come to incorrect conclusions very rapidly. It would be better to say that "one ASPECT of intelligence is largely inherited." (And a fairly limited aspect, at that.) While thinking quickly certainly assists in eliminating hypotheses, adaptation to current conditions, and complex planning in real time, many aspects of intelligence would not seem to be materially affected by 'quick thinking.' Comprehension, abstract thought, and creativity do not seem to be even peripherally correlated with quick processing, and indeed, from my experience, the ability to make snap judgements may impair the full blossoming of those aspects of intelligence.

Gerhard Adam's picture
Will somebody please define "intelligence"?  Seems like this is a lot of excitement over something that hasn't been quantified.

Identical twins share more than genes. In a brilliant 1987 article in Behavioral & Brain Sciences entitled "Why are children in the same family so different from one another?", Plomin and Daniels point out how much of the environment of children is NON-SHARED. They have had a substantial research career since along these same lines.

On the other hand, identical twins are the same gender, eliciting many of the same environmental opportunities and constraints associated with gender, have the same appearance in terms of physical attractiveness, and, in general, have all of the "person" variables in the person -environment interaction held constant. The greater coherence between the identical pairs may well reflect greater environmental similarity as well as greater genetic similarity.

And, in the interest of full disclosure, I am neither Plomin nor Daniels (-:

To borrow from Judge Potter Stewart -- I might not be able to define intelligence, but I know it when I see it.

"The whole point of this research," Thompson said, "is to give us insight into brain diseases."

Sounds like CYA. The broader implications, should their conclusion be correct, are more than obvious.

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