Abstract

Starting from the inductance in neurons, two physical origins are discussed, which are the coil inductance of myelin and the piezoelectric effect of the cell membrane. The direct evidence of the coil inductance of myelin is the opposite spiraling phenomenon between adjacent myelin sheaths confirmed by previous studies. As for the piezoelectric effect of the cell membrane, which has been well-known in physics, the direct evidence is the mechanical wave accompany with action potential. Therefore, a more complete physical nature of neural signals is provided. In conventional neuroscience, the neural signal is a pure electrical signal. In our new theory, the neural signal is an energy pulse containing electrical, magnetic, and mechanical components. Such a physical understanding of the neural signal and neural systems significantly improve the knowledge of the neurons. On the one hand, we achieve a corrected neural circuit of an inductor-capacitor-capacitor (LCC) form, whose frequency response and electrical characteristics have been validated by previous studies and the modeling fitting of artifacts in our experiments. On the other hand, a number of phenomena observed in neural experiments are explained. In particular, they are the mechanism of magnetic nerve stimulations and ultrasound nerve stimulations, the MRI image contrast issue and Anode Break Excitation. At last, the biological function of myelin is summarized. It is to provide inductance in the process of neural signal, which can enhance the signal speed in peripheral nervous systems and provide frequency modulation function in central nervous systems.

Highlights

  • Myelin is a lipid-rich substance that surrounds nerve cell axons

  • The action potential can only be activated on nodes of Ranvier, which are unmyelinated gaps between myelin sheaths

  • Inductive Myelin layers can have long unmyelinated tracts between two myelin sheaths, which is different from the regular myelin profile in peripheral nervous systems (PNS) (Tomassy et al, 2014)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Myelin is a lipid-rich substance that surrounds nerve cell axons. Conventionally, it is often compared to electrical insulation on nerve fibers, inhibiting the ionic current on internodes (Bean, 2007). Inductive Myelin layers can have long unmyelinated tracts between two myelin sheaths, which is different from the regular myelin profile in PNS (Tomassy et al, 2014) This finding challenges the understanding of myelin as insulating layers, indicating a new concept and mechanism about how information is transmitted and integrated in the brain (Fields, 2014). Two physical entities are proposed, the inductance generated by the myelin spiral and the equivalent/pseudo inductance by the piezoelectric effect of the cell membrane, to account for the huge inductance observed in the physiological study of neurons. Based on these two physics, a multiphysics perspective of the neural signal is proposed. This figure, together with Scheme 1, builds the framework of the whole theory in this study

CHAPTER 1. HOW TO UNDERSTAND THE INDUCTANCE?
CHAPTER 2. HOW DOES THE MYELIN GENERATE THE INDUCTANCE?
A Renewed Understanding of the Multiphysics in Neural Signal and Myelin
CHAPTER 3. THE EQUIVALENT CIRCUIT OF THE NEURON
CHAPTER 4. HOW NEURONS ARE AFFECTED BY THE MAGNETIC FIELD
CHAPTER 6. SUMMARY OF ALL PHENOMENA AND PREDICTIONS
CONCLUSION
DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT
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