Could Neurons Carry Light? A New Frontier for Thai Brain and Tech Research
Scientists are probing a bold question: can neurons, long viewed as the brain’s electrical messengers, also transmit light? Interdisciplinary teams blending neuroscience with advanced optics are testing the idea. If proven, it could transform our understanding of brain function and enable faster brain-computer interfaces and novel diagnostics for neurological diseases. Data from leading research centers suggests researchers are inching toward experimental evidence, though clear proof remains elusive.
For Thai readers, the potential implications are profound. The brain has traditionally been seen as a network that communicates through electrical impulses and chemical signals. Now researchers are exploring whether axons—the long, cable-like projections of neurons—could carry light particles, similar to fiber-optic cables used in telecommunications. If this “optical layer” exists, the brain would hide an additional mode of information flow alongside electrical signaling.