This is a news story, published by MSN, that relates primarily to Harvard Medical School news.
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visual cortexNewsweek
•85% Informative
Researchers from Harvard Medical School conducted a new study on mice.
They monitored the activity of neurons in the visual cortex of mice during experiments in which the rodents were in a quiet waking state.
They found that when a mouse looked at the two images, neurons in their brain fired in specific patterns for each case.
These patterns were sufficiently distinctive that the scientists could discern which image the mouse had looked at from the neural activity.
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