| Response
to the poem ‘Once I looked into your
eyes'
Warren S. Warren
I won’t pretend I can write like Paul
Muldoon. But I might be able to make more
interesting pictures. Many of the spectacular
achievements of twentieth century science
followed a simple paradigm. As new directions
in basic atomic or molecular physics matured,
they were adopted by chemists and applied
physicists. This work in turn enabled applications
in biological, clinical, and environmental
science. The centers I direct at Princeton
(including POEM, the center for Photonics
and Optoelectronic Materials) support this
process by bridging the gaps between innovation,
technology, and application.
Imaging technologies provide many of the best-known
illustrations of this evolution. Fifty years
ago, measurements of the magnetism created
when atomic nuclei “spin” were
at the forefront of esoteric physics research,
with no conceivable application. Gradually
the applications became clear, and by the
1960s, every modern chemistry department had
“nuclear magnetic resonance” spectrometers.
By the 1980s, most hospitals had “magnetic
resonance imagers” (“nuclear”
was dropped to avoid scaring patients) which
give beautifully detailed images of soft tissue.
Imaging function, not just structure, is the
modern research frontier, and new methods
are unraveling the workings of the brain.
The black and white images below come from
a conventional MRI of a volunteer, similar
to what you would get in a hospital. The slice
at right (located at the position of the yellow
line at left) shows colored dots at points
that differed when he read Muldoon’s
poem verses a non-emotive text. This activation
in the prefrontal cortex is no surprise: it
is the most evolved part of the brain, and
a center of both critical and emotional response.
More extensive studies (with multiple subjects
and multiple tasks) can give better spatial
resolution. In recent papers, scientists have
imaged differences in the brain activation
between viewing a lover and viewing an opposite-sex
friend; between male and female perceptions;
and between moral reasoning and simple decision-making.
Some would say that the mind imaging revolution
threatens to convert the field of
psychology into a quantitative science over
the next few decades. For this to happen,
new
technological advances must improve both spatial
and temporal resolution. One promising advance
involves lasers. Starting with a very short
lump of light (in time), we can sculpt pulses
that quickly change amplitude and color in
complex patterns. The figure at right shows
the “gremlin pulse,” a very simple
pulse used in my laboratories to test shaping
capabilities (we can actually program hundreds
of features simultaneously). One application
of shaped pulses is “making molecules
dance,” or producing just the right
color and time distribution to excite specific
compounds. A related application is imaging.
The human body is almost transparent at specific
near-infrared wavelengths, just slightly outside
of the visible region (but easily detected
by modern instruments), and subtle brain changes
can change the amount of transmitted light.
Unfortunately, light scattering currently
makes high-resolution pictures impossible.
Pulse shaping may provide an attractive solution,
allowing low power lasers to see through scattering
and find hidden chemical signals.
We are not yet able to probe truly deep questions
(brain sensors will not replace literary critics
for some time). Still, the evolving ability
to image the mind has enormous consequences
that range far beyond neuroscience. The world
needs more poets who follow science, and more
scientists who learn to appreciate beauty
in words.
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