Latest brain activity News | Page 4

Crashes, blackouts and climate tipping points: how can we tell when a system is close to the edge?
Study confirms frequency of undetected responsiveness in severe brain injury
Racism and discrimination lead to faster aging through brain network changes, new study finds
AIs encode language like brains do − opening a window on human conversations
Serotonin-producing neurons regulate malignancy in ependymoma brain tumors
We now know what a brain looks like on psilocybin – but what does that tell us?
Six ways to look after your brain health in your 20s and 30s
Brain Health And Prevention | World Brain Day
Open golf 2024: neuroscience reveals the secrets of better putting – new study
A novel and unique neural signature for depression revealed
Researchers Discover New Neural Biomarker For OCD
Think you’ve decided what to buy? Actually, your brain is still deciding – even as you put it in your basket
First public hospital in Australia to provide innovative incisionless surgery
Interest grows in fly agaric – but here’s why you shouldn’t confuse it with ‘magic mushrooms’
Unchartered waters: Swinburne explores how virtual sailing could treat major depressive disorder (MDD) in world first trial
Bipolar disorder: we’ve pinpointed the brain areas which drive mood bias
Making art is a uniquely human act, and one that provides a wellspring of health benefits
Research explores biology of pregnancy-related mental health risk
Precision laser surgery cuts focal epileptic seizure spread
Novel Diamond Quantum Magnetometer for Ambient Condition Magnetoencephalography Researchers have developed a highly sensitive diamond quantum magnetometer that can achieve practical ambient condition magnetoencephalography
Do we have more empathy for people who are similar to us? New research suggests it’s not that simple
PolyU research finds improving AI large language models helps better align with human brain activity
Ultrasound waves zapped at the brain are being used to treat everything from hand tremors to addiction
Synced brains: why being constantly tuned in to your child’s every need isn’t always ideal
Wearable devices can now harvest our brain data. Australia needs urgent privacy reforms
Researchers create AI model to understand how brain activity relates to illness
UK’s first centre of excellence for music and dementia hosted by Manchester Camerata
Terminal lucidity: why do loved ones with dementia sometimes ‘come back’ before death?
Scientists solve chemical mystery at the interface of biology and technology
Can a drug like Ozempic help treat addictions to alcohol, opioids or other substances?
A new wave of wearable devices will collect a mountain on information on us – we need to get wise about the privacy implications
Can AI read our minds? Probably not, but that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t be worried
Everyday social interactions predict language development in infants
Brain scans of Philly jazz musicians reveal secrets to reaching creative flow
Three new McNair Scholars join Baylor College of Medicine as the College hosts the 12th annual McNair Symposium
‘Noisy’ autistic brains seem better at certain tasks. Here’s why neuroaffirmative research matters
PolyU research reveals significant effects of instructors onscreen during video classes in aiding student learning
Elon Musk’s brain implant company offers an intriguing glimpse of an internet connecting human minds
The mystery of consciousness shows there may be a limit to what science alone can achieve
Making up for lost time: new research reveals how our brains ‘predict the present’
Sleep and circadian rhythm problems linked with poor mental health – new research
Nature vs nurture: shedding light on heritable brain activity
Alpha, beta, theta: what are brain states and brain waves? And can we control them?
Penguins obtain large quantities of sleep via seconds-long microsleeps
Scientists use AI-generated images to map visual functions in the brain
What happens when technology learns to read our minds?
What is sudden unexpected death in epilepsy, and what causes it?
Decision-making mechanisms go awry in OCD brains: study