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 This latest clue about the 'architecture of Consciousness' supports a Nobel Prize winner's theory about how Quantum Physics 
			works in your Brain... 
 
			 
 To pull it off, microscopic hollow tube structures called "microtubules" perform some advanced physics; the experts believe microtubules perform incredible operations in the quantum realm. 
 
			Citing the work of earlier researchers, the study 
			infers that the same kinds of quantum operations are likely 
			happening in the human brain. 
 One group of drugged rats also received microtubule-stabilizing drugs, while the other did not. 
 
			The researchers discovered that the 
			microtubule-stabilizing molecules kept the rats conscious for longer 
			than the non-stabilized rats, which more quickly lost their 
			"righting reflex," or the ability to restore normal posture, 
			according to the group's findings, which were published in the 
			peer-reviewed journal eNeuro in August 2024. 
 
			It's a major step toward verifying a theory that 
			our brains perform quantum operations, and that this ability 
			generates our consciousness - an idea that's been gaining traction 
			over the past three decades. 
 Specifically, 
 
			This is known as 
			
			Orch OR theory, referring to 
			the ability of microtubules to perform quantum computations through 
			a mathematical process Penrose calls "objective reduction." 
 If it comes into contact with its environment, as when a measuring apparatus observes it, then the particle loses its "superposition" of multiple states. 
 It collapses into a definite, measurable state, the state in which it was observed. 
 Penrose hypothesized that, 
 If this quantum theory of consciousness tied to microtubules turns out to be correct, it could revolutionize our understanding of consciousness and even strengthen the trailblazing theory that, 
 In other words, 
 Many scientists disregard the Orch OR theory because quantum effects have only been produced in the lab under extremely cold conditions. 
 For example, our technology now includes quantum computers, but their operations rely on temperatures near absolute zero (around minus 273 degrees Celsius) to maintain their quantum states. 
 The warm brain falls well outside those limits, at about 32 to 40 degrees Celsius (about 90 to 104 degrees Fahrenheit) in the deepest regions of the brain, according to a 2022 study. 
 
			Yet scientists have collected a promising set of 
			data over the years indicating that certain quantum-level operations 
			in animals and plants may actually be responsible for life's 
			functions. 
 Scientists suggest that plants must use the quantum property of superposition in order to try all possible paths simultaneously. 
 That way, 
 Similarly, it may make sense for the billions of neurons firing simultaneously in the human brain, 
 An August 2024 study in the journal Physics Review E proposes that a fatty material called myelin, which sheathes the brain cell's axon (Entangled Biphoton Generation in the Myelin Sheath), provides the ideal environment for this entanglement. 
 
			Since the brain appears to be capable of 
			performing quantum operations to facilitate our thoughts, some 
			scientists surmise that this process gives rise to our 
			consciousness. 
 Both involved experiments shining light particles into microtubules and observing that the signal did not degrade. In fact, according to these studies, the experiments demonstrated that quantum states in microtubule signaling can and probably do exist. 
 
			It brings us another step closer to understanding 
			exactly how our brain - and perhaps our very consciousness - is 
			linked to a
			
			quantum universe. 
 ...neuroscientist and Wellesley College professor Mike Wiest, PhD, says in a press release about his team's recent anesthesia study. 
 In addition to the new work helping us understand more about how to treat brain-related health issues, he says, 
 
 
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