Live Science on MSN
'As if a shudder ran from its brain to its body': The neuroscientists that learned to control memories in rodents
In this adapted excerpt from "How to Change a Memory," author and neuroscientist Steve Ramirez recounts the events that led ...
Fiber-optic technology revolutionized the telecommunications industry and may soon do the same for brain research.
Using powerful 7-Tesla brain imaging, researchers mapped how the brainstem manages pain differently across the body. They ...
Scientists from Duke-NUS Medical School and their collaborators have created one of the most comprehensive single cell maps ...
Summary: Scientists have built one of the most comprehensive single-cell maps of the developing human brain. The new BrainSTEM framework analyzed nearly 680,000 fetal brain cells to chart their growth ...
For 150 years, Broca's area has defined speech production. Now scientists have discovered a second parallel system that ...
Learning to code doesn’t require new brain systems—it builds on the ones we already use for logic and reasoning.
Amazon S3 on MSN
The Race to Control Human Brains Is Escalating
The curious minds at ColdFusion explore the escalating race to control human brains. This raises profound ethical and ...
The human brain can do many amazing things, but self-repair is not one of its repertoire of abilities. Once neurons die—from ...
New research reveals that the human brain contains a built-in pain map that activates in different regions when relieving ...
Learn how Claude's ability to monitor its internal states could transform AI safety and provide insights into human brain ...
News-Medical.Net on MSN
Scientists create detailed single-cell map of the developing human brain
Scientists from Duke-NUS Medical School and their collaborators have created one of the most comprehensive single cell maps of the developing human brain. The atlas captures nearly every cell type, ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results