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erronis

(24,404 posts)
Wed May 6, 2026, 11:51 AM 15 hrs ago

While patients lay unconscious under anesthesia, their brains kept decoding stories and preparing for what came next

https://medicalxpress.com/news/2026-05-patients-lay-unconscious-anesthesia-brains.html
Baylor College of Medicine

Baylor College of Medicine researchers have found that the human brain is capable of sophisticated language processing while in an unconscious state from general anesthesia. The findings, published in Nature, challenge what we know about the role of consciousness and cognition, and could open new ways of understanding memory, language and brain-computer interfaces.

"Our findings show that the brain is far more active and capable during unconsciousness than previously thought," said Dr. Sameer Sheth, professor and Cullen Foundation Endowed chair of neurosurgery and a McNair Scholar at Baylor. "Even when patients are fully anesthetized, their brains continue to analyze the world around them."

. . .

Researchers then moved on to conduct a more complex experiment where they played short stories to patients while recording neural responses. Surprisingly, the hippocampus demonstrated real-time processing of language. Neural activity showed the brain's ability to differentiate parts of speech, such as nouns, verbs and adjectives, based on patterns of neuron firing.

Even more surprising, researchers found that neural signals could predict upcoming words in a sentence.

"The brain appears to anticipate what comes next in a story, even without conscious awareness," said Sheth, who is also Director of The Gordon and Mary Cain Pediatric Neurology Research Foundation Laboratories within the Duncan Neurological Research Institute at Texas Children's Hospital.

"This kind of predictive coding is something we associate with being awake and attentive, yet it's happening here in an unconscious state," said Dr. Benjamin Hayden, professor of neurosurgery at Baylor.

These discoveries suggest that cognitive functions such as language comprehension and prediction do not require consciousness. Instead, consciousness may depend on broader coordination across brain regions rather than activity within a single structure like the hippocampus.

. . .
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While patients lay unconscious under anesthesia, their brains kept decoding stories and preparing for what came next (Original Post) erronis 15 hrs ago OP
My mom's brain was processing a lot of what was going on during the time she was flat-lined in ICU Attilatheblond 14 hrs ago #1
Wow. That is amazing (and scary). erronis 14 hrs ago #2
We don't know much of what is going on when we think there is nothing going on. Attilatheblond 11 hrs ago #6
Real food for thought. Valuable information, erronis. Thank you. Judi Lynn 12 hrs ago #3
Just trying to walk in your footsteps, Judi! erronis 12 hrs ago #4
Thank you e. ... oldsoldierfadingfast 11 hrs ago #5
I'd be honored to be on your AID list. We are all in this together, for better and otherwise. erronis 10 hrs ago #7
Check your mail N/T oldsoldierfadingfast 10 hrs ago #8

Attilatheblond

(9,163 posts)
1. My mom's brain was processing a lot of what was going on during the time she was flat-lined in ICU
Wed May 6, 2026, 12:17 PM
14 hrs ago

After being resuscitated, she asked doctors and nurses very complicated questions regarding specifics of what all they did as they revived her. She had absolutely zero medical training and only knew some basic first aid for the sorts of minor injuries kids got.

erronis

(24,404 posts)
2. Wow. That is amazing (and scary).
Wed May 6, 2026, 12:34 PM
14 hrs ago

Last edited Wed May 6, 2026, 02:20 PM - Edit history (1)

We wonder how many "brain dead" folks are still processing.

A rather chilling but strangely beautiful fictional story about this: 10 Minutes 38 Seconds in This Strange World

Attilatheblond

(9,163 posts)
6. We don't know much of what is going on when we think there is nothing going on.
Wed May 6, 2026, 04:02 PM
11 hrs ago

Mom's real 'life' experiences of what she 'saw and heard' the two times she was 'out' for brief periods were pretty intense and backed up by hospital staff when she asked them about patients in other rooms too. Seems time might be experienced differently in that state too. She said she sorta floated around, in and out of several rooms, and staff validated everything she told them she witnessed.

That's why I kept talking to my husband after he dropped and only took a ragged breath every few minutes while I waited for the ambulance to arrive.

5. Thank you e. ...
Wed May 6, 2026, 04:00 PM
11 hrs ago

This explains a lot of what I went thru after my last two surgeries when I thought I was losing my mind.
I had received fentanyl in the ER just prior to the surg. Hallucinations and bad dreams followed along with a 6-month long loss of short term memory.
Living alone and being responsible for my own care and finances was a nightmare of its own.

I had 4 bills to pay laying on my desk. Paid 2 of them twice and the other 2 (one being my home-owner ins.) not at all. Fortunately, I live in an area where we all know each, and my ins. agent got my home-owner's ins. reinstated after a 2 yr. lapse after calling one of his friends who backed up my story.
Now, the agent and his sec. have me on a personal watch and my payments are on auto-pay. I have added them to my AiDs (Angels In Disguise) list. Will not go into all the other dumb crap that I did other than to say I did keep the dog fed; but only because he kept reminding me.

And now, dear erronis, thanks to your post, I am adding you to my list of AiDs-- I can now say, 'it wasn't my 'brain'; it was the med. I feel exonerated!

erronis

(24,404 posts)
7. I'd be honored to be on your AID list. We are all in this together, for better and otherwise.
Wed May 6, 2026, 04:31 PM
10 hrs ago

I'm really impressed how people in DU will discuss some very sensitive topics with each other; reach out for help; and give help. I don't think many other "social media" sites have this type of caring.

More concretely, if I can be on your real list, I'd be happy to send you contact information by DM. Please let me know.

I've felt much more mortal in the last 5 or so years (knocking on 80s door), and I've made sure I have my various health forms (proxy and advanced directive). Fortunately I have almost no belongings of value, so I don't have to worry about that type of stuff.

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