Study uncovers brain's timing system for cognition

Researchers at Rutgers Health have identified how the brain integrates fast and slow processing through white matter connections, influencing cognitive abilities. Published in Nature Communications, the study analyzed data from nearly 1,000 people to map these neural timescales. Variations in this system may explain differences in thinking efficiency and hold promise for mental health research.

The human brain juggles information arriving at vastly different speeds, from immediate environmental cues to deliberate reflections on context and intent. A new investigation from Rutgers Health, detailed in Nature Communications, reveals how it achieves this balance via intrinsic neural timescales—unique processing windows for each brain region—and the white matter networks that link them.

Led by Linden Parkes, an assistant professor of psychiatry at Rutgers Health, the team examined brain imaging from 960 individuals to construct detailed connectomes. They employed mathematical models to trace information flow across these networks. "To affect our environment through action, our brains must combine information processed over different timescales," Parkes explained. "The brain achieves this by leveraging its white matter connectivity to share information across regions, and this integration is crucial for human behavior."

The findings show that the arrangement of these timescales across the cerebral cortex determines how smoothly the brain transitions between activity patterns linked to behavior. Not everyone has the same setup: "We found that differences in how the brain processes information at different speeds help explain why people vary in their cognitive abilities," Parkes noted. Those with better-aligned wiring for fast and slow signals tend to exhibit higher cognitive capacity.

These patterns also tie into genetic, molecular, and cellular brain features, with parallels observed in mice, indicating evolutionary conservation. "Our work highlights a fundamental link between the brain's white matter connectivity and its local computational properties," Parkes added.

Looking ahead, the researchers plan to apply this framework to disorders like schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and depression to explore disruptions in temporal processing. Collaborators included Avram Holmes, Ahmad Beyh, Amber Howell, and Jason Z. Kim from Cornell University. The study appeared in Nature Communications (2025; 16(1)), with DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-66542-w.

Makala yanayohusiana

Illustration of glowing whole-brain neural networks coordinating efficiently, representing a University of Notre Dame study on general intelligence.
Picha iliyoundwa na AI

Study points to whole-brain network coordination as a key feature of general intelligence

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University of Notre Dame researchers report evidence that general intelligence is associated with how efficiently and flexibly brain networks coordinate across the whole connectome, rather than being localized to a single “smart” region. The findings, published in Nature Communications, are based on neuroimaging and cognitive data from 831 Human Connectome Project participants and an additional 145 adults from the INSIGHT Study.

Scientists at The Ohio State University have charted how patterns of brain wiring can predict activity linked to many mental functions across the entire brain. Each region shows a distinct “connectivity fingerprint” tied to roles such as language and memory. The peer‑reviewed findings in Network Neuroscience offer a baseline for studying healthy young adult brains and for comparisons with neurological or psychiatric conditions.

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Neuroscientists at Princeton University report that the brain achieves flexible learning by reusing modular cognitive components across tasks. In experiments with rhesus macaques, researchers found that the prefrontal cortex assembles these reusable “cognitive Legos” to adapt behaviors quickly. The findings, published November 26 in Nature, underscore differences from current AI systems and could eventually inform treatments for disorders that impair flexible thinking.

New research from MIT reveals that when sleep-deprived individuals experience attention lapses, their brains trigger waves of cerebrospinal fluid to clear waste, mimicking a sleep-like process. This compensation disrupts focus temporarily but may help maintain brain health. The findings, published in Nature Neuroscience, highlight the brain's adaptive response to missed rest.

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Researchers analyzing brain-imaging and treatment data from hundreds of people report that Parkinson’s disease is associated with abnormal connectivity involving the somato-cognitive action network (SCAN), a motor-cortex network described in 2023. In a small trial, stimulation aimed at this network produced a higher response rate than stimulation of nearby motor areas, raising the possibility of more targeted noninvasive treatments.

Scientists are on the verge of simulating a human brain using the world's most powerful supercomputers, aiming to unlock secrets of brain function. Led by researchers at Germany's Jülich Research Centre, the project leverages the JUPITER supercomputer to model 20 billion neurons. This breakthrough could enable testing of theories on memory and drug effects that smaller models cannot achieve.

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A study in PLOS Biology reports that synchronizing activity between frontal and parietal brain regions using noninvasive electrical stimulation slightly increased participants’ willingness to share money in a standard economics task, including in choices that reduced their own payoff.

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