Meta menu:

From here, you can access the Emergencies page, Contact Us page, Accessibility Settings, Language Selection, and Search page.

  • Go to Emergencies.
  • Current language selection: EN

    Change language selection to:

  • Contact us:

    Campus Charité MitteCharitéplatz 1 (local address: Luisenstraße 13)
    10117 Berlin

    Campus Virchow-KlinikumAugustenburger Platz 1 (local address: Südring 4)
    13353 Berlin

    Campus Benjamin FranklinHindenburgdamm 30 (local address: Haus V, Eingang West)
    12203 Berlin

  • Accessibility:
    Contrast Settings Change contrast
    Font size
    Font size bigger: STRG+ Font size smaller: STRG-

    You can enlarge or reduce the browser window. Please use CTRL and + to zoom in or CTRL and - to zoom out. Press CTRL and 0 to reset your browser window to normal size.

Open Menu
© Charité | Wiebke Peitz

Press release

25.02.2019

Bungee jumping for science

Back to Overview

You are here:

Researchers measure readiness potential outside a laboratory for the first time

Bungee-Jumping im Dienste der Wissenschaft: Ein Proband springt 192 Meter in die Tiefe während seine Hirnströme abgeleitet werden. Copyright: Soekadar/Charité
Bungee jumping for science: a participant has his brain waves recorded while jumping into a 192-meter abyss. Copyright: Soekadar/Charité
Marius Nann, Erstautor der Studie, präpariert die Elektroden-Kappe, mit der die Hirnaktivität des Bungee-Springers aufgezeichnet wird. Copyright: Soekadar/Charité
The study’s first author, Marius Nann, prepares the electrode cap which will be used to record the bungee jumper’s brain activity. Copyright: Soekadar/Charité

Immediately before a person decides to launch themselves off a bridge for a bungee jump, there is a measurable increase in their brain activity. This can be recorded nearly one second before the person makes the conscious decision to jump. Researchers from Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin have, for the first time, succeeded in measuring this ‘Bereitschaftspotential’ (readiness potential) outside a laboratory and under extreme conditions. Their findings will help advance the development of brain-computer interfaces, devices that can help quadriplegics control neuroprosthetics which allow them to regain the use of their hands. Results from this research have been published in Scientific Reports*.  

What happens inside the brain of a person who, tied to a bungee rope, is just about to leap off a 192m high bridge? A team of researchers, led by Prof. Dr. Surjo Soekadar of Charité’s Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, set out to answer this question using an extraordinary experiment. The researchers asked two research participants to take a total of 30 jumps from the 192m high Europa Bridge near Innsbruck in Austria, each time recording their brain waves. They were able to demonstrate that brain activity measurements are feasible even in emotionally charged real-life situations – such as, in this case, a bungee jump. For the first time, the researchers succeeded in recording the readiness potential outside of a laboratory and demonstrated the effect of extreme emotions.

The readiness potential is a shift in electrical voltage in the brain, which can be measured using electroencephalography (EEG) electrodes placed along the scalp. It indicates that a voluntary act – such as a hand movement – is imminent, and it is caused even before the person becomes aware of their conscious decision to execute this movement. The phenomenon was discovered in 1964, when Lüder Deecke and Hans-Helmut Kornhuber studied the brain activity of test subjects during hundreds of finger movements.

“Measuring this electrical potential is extremely tricky even under laboratory conditions, since the voltage shift involved is in the range of only a few millionths of a volt. However, to advance the development of brain-computer interfaces that are suitable for everyday use, we wanted to study whether the readiness potential could be measured in real-life scenarios,” reports Prof. Soekadar. It only took a few jumps for the researchers to collect the necessary evidence to prove this. They also found that brain activity patterns recorded during jumps from a height of 192 meters did not differ from those recorded during jumps from a height of just 1 meter. The two test subjects also completed a total of 30 jumps from a height of 1 meter. This result means that the fear experienced prior to undertaking a potentially life-threatening action does not influence the nature of the readiness potential itself. 

This study provides a strong basis on which to advance the development of brain-computer interfaces. These devices translate brain activity into control commands for robots or other technological devices and can even enable quadriplegic patients to eat without assistance. The brain activity produced by the intention to execute a grasping motion can thus trigger this movement in an electromechanical support structure which is attached to the paralyzed hand. For such neuroprostheses to be suitable for use in everyday situations, it is extremely important that strong emotions do not adversely affect a person’s ability to control them. “Our results suggest that brain-computer interfaces can remain reliable even when used under extreme emotional stress,” explains Prof. Soekadar. He and his team will use their findings to inform a new study, which will see such support structures being used by both paraplegics and patients with stroke.

* Nann M et al. To jump or not to jump – The Bereitschaftspotential required to jump into 192-meter abyss. Sci Rep. 2019 Feb 19;9(1):2243. doi: 10.1038/s41598-018-38447-w.

On this study
Prof. Dr. Surjo Soekadar was appointed Einstein Professor for Clinical Neurotechnology at Charité in November 2018. The study reported here was conducted in early 2018, when he was Leader of the Applied Neurotechnology Laboratory at the University Hospital of Tübingen’s Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy. 

Links

Original article

Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy on Campus Charité Mitte

Contact

Prof. Dr. Surjo R. Soekadar
Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy
NeuroCure Cluster of Excellence
Campus Charité Mitte
Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin
t: +49 30 450 528 153



Back to Overview