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scienceyoucanlove: Serotonin in the cerebral cortex Photomicrograph revealing the location of a transporter of serotonin (a widespread neurotransmitter) in areas of the cerebral cortex that process sensory information such as touch and hearing.Serotonin
neurosciencenews: Substance in Humans is Effective Fighting Stroke Damage Read the full article Substance in Humans is Effective Fighting Stroke Damage at NeuroscienceNews.com. A molecular substance that occurs naturally in humans and rats was found
neurosciencestuff: Tiny chip mimics brain, delivers supercomputer speed Researchers Thursday unveiled a powerful new postage-stamp size chip delivering supercomputer performance using a process that mimics the human brain. The so-called “neurosynaptic”
neurosciencestuff: How we form habits and change existing ones Much of our daily lives are taken up by habits that we’ve formed over our lifetime. An important characteristic of a habit is that it’s automatic— we don’t always recognize habits
neuromorphogenesis: Shake it off? Not so easy for people with depression Rejected by a person you like? Just “shake it off” and move on, as music star Taylor Swift says.But while that might work for many people, it may not be so easy for those with
semper-draca:cerastes:frodo-sam:THE LORD OF THE RINGS: The Two Towers (2002) dir. Peter Jackson. I love the implication of Dwarves knowing neurosciences, because if anyone is going to discover that in a fantasy setting, it is definitely the people that
rynnay: spookyprincesshajimeichinose: awwww-cute: Found this little guy at college today I wonder what he is majoring in. maybe neuroscience.
ki3ran-d0ll: whataboutleslie: did-you-kno: There’s a way to stop the ‘tickle’ when someone’s fingers are accosting you.ri-science:How neuroscience can help you control your tickling responseYour brain predicts sensations based on your own
neurosciencestuff: Hunger affects decision making and perception of risk Hungry people are often difficult to deal with. A good meal can affect more than our mood, it can also influence our willingness to take risks. This phenomenon is also apparent
neurosciencestuff: Study Appears to Overturn Prevailing View of How the Brain is Wired A series of studies conducted by Randy Bruno, PhD, and Christine Constantinople, PhD, of Columbia University’s Department of Neuroscience, topples convention by
currentsinbiology: Cerebellar Purkinje neurons, 2003. This photomicrograph shows a portion of the cerebellum in which only one type of neuron — its Purkinje cells — has been illuminated by a genetically encoded fluorescent protein; meanwhile, other
currentsinbiology: Derived from human embryonic stem cells, precursor neural cells grow in a lab dish and generate mature neurons (red) and glial cells (green), in the lab of University of Wisconsin-Madison stem cell researcher and neurodevelopmental
neurosciencestuff: Researchers develop new approach for studying deadly brain cancer Human glioblastoma multiforme, one of the most common, aggressive and deadly forms of brain cancer, is notoriously difficult to study. Scientists have traditionally
neurosciencestuff: Burnt sugar-derivative reduces muscle wasting in fly and mouse models of muscular dystrophy A trace substance in caramelized sugar, when purified and given in appropriate doses, improves muscle regeneration in a mouse model of Duchenne
neurosciencestuff: Motional layers in the brain Recognising movement and its direction is one of the first and most important processing steps in any visual system. By this way, nearby predators or prey can be detected and even one’s own movements
medicalschool: Fluorescence image of a rat cerebellum stained to reveal the distribution of inositol triphosphate receptors in Purkinje neurons (green), GFAP in glial cells (red), and DNA throughout the cells (cyan). The image was acquired by multiphoton
neurosciencestuff: The white arrow highlights the primary neuronal cilium, a hair-like structure on nerve cells. The neuron on the right has no cilium because of the loss of a protein linked to intellectual disability in humans. Credit: YOSHIHO IKEUCHI
neurosciencestuff: Alzheimer’s: newly identified protein pathology impairs RNA splicing Researchers at Emory University School of Medicine’s Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center have identified a previously unrecognized type of pathology in the
neurosciencestuff: To predict, perchance to update: Neural responses to the unexpected Among the brain’s many functions is the use of predictive models to processing expected stimuli or actions. In such a model, we experience surprise when presented
currentsinbiology: Mouse Hippocampus Dr. Marta Cortes-Canteli Madrid, Spain Technique: Confocal
neurosciencestuff: Previously Unstudied Gene Is Essential for Normal Nerve Development Our ability to detect heat, touch, tickling and other sensations depends on our sensory nerves. Now, for the first time, researchers at Albert Einstein College of
neurosciencestuff: When neurons have less to say, they say it with particular emphasis The brain is an extremely adaptable organ – but it is also very conservative according to scientists from the Max Planck Institute of Neurobiology in Martinsried
neurosciencestuff: Grasshopper Mice Are Numb to the Pain of the Bark Scorpion Sting The painful, potentially deadly stings of bark scorpions are nothing more than a slight nuisance to grasshopper mice, which voraciously kill and consume their prey with
neurosciencestuff: How problems with an Alzheimer’s protein can jam up traffic in the brain Scientists have known for some time that a protein called presenilin plays a role in Alzheimer’s disease, and a new study reveals one intriguing way this
neurosciencestuff: Researchers surprised to find how neural circuits zero in on the specific information needed for decisions While eating lunch, you notice an insect buzzing around your plate. Its color and motion could both influence how you respond.
Genes uniquely expressed by the brain's immune cells
Study reveals how variant forms of APOE protein impact risk of Alzheimer's disease
New therapeutic target identified for Huntington's disease
neurosciencestuff: Neurons subtract images and use the differences Efficient reduction of data volumes Researchers have hitherto assumed that information supplied by the sense of sight was transmitted almost in its entirety from its entry point to higher
neurosciencestuff: Image caption: MMP-9 controls onset of paralysis in ALS mice. Sections of muscle stained for nerve (green) and muscle (red); nerve-muscle contacts appear yellow. In the SOD1 mouse, muscles that move the eye (left) retain nerve contacts
neurosciencestuff: Pinpointing the Brain’s Arbitrator We tend to be creatures of habit. In fact, the human brain has a learning system that is devoted to guiding us through routine, or habitual, behaviors. At the same time, the brain has a separate
neurosciencestuff: Scientists slow development of Alzheimer’s trademark cell-killing plaques University of Michigan researchers have learned how to fix a cellular structure called the Golgi that mysteriously becomes fragmented in all Alzheimer’s
neurosciencestuff: Nanopores underlie our ability to tune in to a single voice Inner-ear membrane uses tiny pores to mechanically separate sounds, researchers find. Even in a crowded room full of background noise, the human ear is remarkably adept at
neurosciencestuff: Scientists Provide New Grasp of Soft Touch A study led by scientists at The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) has helped solve a long-standing mystery about the sense of touch. The “gentle touch” sensations that convey the stroke
neurosciencestuff: Existence of new neuron repair pathway discovered Most of your neurons can’t be replaced. Other parts of your body – such as skin and bone – can be replaced by the body growing new cells, but when you injure your neurons, you
neurosciencestuff: Scientists Hunt Down Origin of Huntington’s Disease in the Brain and Provide Insights to Help Deliver Therapy The gene mutation that causes Huntington’s disease appears in every cell in the body, yet kills only two types of brain
Isolating the Circuits that Control Voluntary Movement
neurosciencestuff: (Image caption: Dendrite of an amygdala principal neuron with dendritic spines (white). Inhibitory synaptic contacts are shown in red. Credit: © MPI f. Brain Research/ J. Letzkus) Learning brakes in the brain When it learns, the
Molecular 'scaffold' could hold key to new dementia treatments
Scientists tie social behavior to activity in specific brain circuit
neurosciencestuff: (Image caption: The presence of p45 (green staining) and p75 (red staining) indicates that motor neurons increase both p45 and p75 expression after sciatic nerve injury in an animal. Image credit: Courtesy of the Salk Institute for
neurosciencestuff: Bioengineers Create Functional 3D Brain-like Tissue Bioengineers have created three-dimensional brain-like tissue that functions like and has structural features similar to tissue in the rat brain and that can be kept alive in the
neurosciencestuff: (Image caption: Pictured is a mouse hippocampal neuron studded with thousands of synaptic connections (yellow). The number and location of synapses — not too many or too few — is critical to healthy brain function. The researchers
neurosciencestuff: (Image caption: The first images of the vertical occipital fasciculus, with varying names and abbreviations. Seeing Wernicke’s 1881 drawing from a monkey brain was the “aha” moment that helped the researchers piece the story
neurosciencestuff: (Image caption: Oligodendrocyte progenitor cells in the brain (OPC, green) influence synaptic signaling between neurones (red) integrated in the neuronal network. Credit: Institute of Molecular Cell Biology) Neurons listen to glial
neurosciencestuff: (Image caption: After treatment with the DAMGO, an endogenous mu-opiod receptor is internalized in endosomes (above, left) and after DAMGO washout is recycled back to the cell surface (above, right))Researchers Discover How Pain
neurosciencestuff: (Image caption: Drawing of the cells of the chick cerebellum by Santiago Ramón y Cajal, from “Estructura de los centros nerviosos de las aves,” Madrid, circa 1905) Butterflies of the Soul Modern neuroscience, for all its complexity,
ultrafacts: - When you “lose yourself” inside the world of a fictional character while reading a story, you may actually end up changing your own behavior and thoughts to match that of the character, a new study suggests. Researchers at Ohio State
I have hope or I am nothing
sixpenceee: Harvard University offers a completely free online course on the Fundamentals of Neuroscience that you can get a certificate for successfully completing and which requires nothing other than basic knowledge in Biology and Chemistry. This
shamilli0naire: petition to title all research papers like clickbait articles “You’ll NEVER Believe What These Rats Are Doing After Dark!” (behavioural analysis, neuroscience) “The Shocking Truth About the Water We Drink!” (fluid dynamics,
Human Brains Are Primally Wired to Notice Animals Surrounded by technology and urbanity though we may be, the human brain remains profoundly hard-wired to respond to animals. When people are shown pictures of animals, specific parts of the amygdala —
futurist-foresight: Memory loss associated with Alzheimers reversed. A definite advance in neuroscience. neuromorphogenesis: Memory loss associated with Alzheimer’s reversed for first time Since its first description over 100 years ago, Alzheimer’s
vintageeveryday: Uncovered after 150 years: Here are two known portraits of Phineas Gage, neuroscience’s most famous patient.
humansofnewyork: “There’s a strange culture in medicine. People are less friendly to each other than I imagined. I got an MD and a PhD in Neuroscience. I’m finishing my residency right now. I guess I thought that everyone would be compassionate,
artandsciencejournal: Art That Gets You Thinking! The brain is a complex biological structure, which works like a machine; or perhaps it is the machine that works like a brain? Two artists, Greg Dunn and Nicolas Baier approach the subject of the brain