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500 results for the search term: brain science
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Teen Brain Science
buttershap
by buttershap  Today 3:59 AM   
 Parent's guide
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How your memory work?
amipress
by amipress  Yesterday 2:23 PM   
 Due to the plasticity of connection between neuron in hippocampus
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The Miracle in Human Brain
amipress
by amipress  Yesterday 2:20 PM   
 How your brain works, amazing connections between billions of neuron cells.
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Future Power Grids Management Inspired by Networks of Brain Cells
Silkweaver
by Silkweaver  10-4-2008   
 No Remarks
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Apply a skeptic’s careful eye
einbar
by einbar  10-3-2008   
 "1. Unnatural environment for cognition 2. Scans are indirect measurements of brain activity. 3. Colors exaggerate the effects in the brain. 4. Brain images are statistical compilations. 5. Brain areas activate for various reasons."
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Who's Minding the Mind?
DianeH
by DianeH  10-3-2008   
 Definitely worth knowing about!
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You're in Good Hands... with computer games
tmarch
by tmarch  10-2-2008   
 Allstate insurance has contracted Posit Science to deliver its InSight software to older drivers to help them improve their cognitive abilities. So tell the kids they have to get off the joystick so granddad can do his homework.
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Scientific Tattoos
birdie-brain
by birdie-brain  10-2-2008    2
 Oh. My. Goodness.
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Brain's Hub of Fear Found
Silkweaver
by Silkweaver  9-30-2008   
 The results of the study, funded by the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation, Burroughs Wellcome Fund, the Center for Behavioral Neuroscience and the Yerkes Center, are detailed in the October issue of the journal Nature Neuroscience. The genetically engineered virus was injected into the amygdala of the mice by Emory graduate student Kimberly Maguschak. The amygdala is a part of the brain thought to be important for forming memories of emotionally charged events. "We found that after beta-catenin is taken out, the mice can still learn to fear the shocks," Maguschak said. "But two days later, their fear doesn't seem to be retained because they spend half as much time freezing in response to the tone." So it appears that beta-catenin is turned on in the amygdala to help in signaling during the learning process, Maguschak said.
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Beauty
aizwaikcha
by aizwaikcha  9-29-2008   
 No Remarks
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Is It Possible To Have An 'Out-of-Body' Experience?
thisnamecantbetaken
by thisnamecantbetaken  9-28-2008    7
  "Death is not a specific moment," he says. "It is a process..." "... a period of time, which may last from a few seconds to an hour or more, in which medical efforts may succeed in restarting the heart and reversing the dying process. What people experience during this period provides a unique window into what we are all likely to experience during the dying process." Clip Song
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Brain Imaging Study Provides New Insight Into Why People Pay Too Much In Auctions
Kelika
by Kelika  9-27-2008   
 No Remarks
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Persistince affects student performance
tumblon
by tumblon  9-26-2008   
 This fascinating Scientific American article makes the case that an attitude of persistence and hard work leads to greater learning and achievement. What it doesn't mention (but is also true) is that persistence actually impacts intelligence - gene expression is affected by stimulation and persistence.
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Auction bidding 'driven by fear'
tabsey
by tabsey  9-26-2008   
 Interesting. My weekly experience at the horses probably makes me agree. (but I'm still getting used to living on my superannuation - considerably less than our prior combined salaries)
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Studies Show the Value of Not Overthinking a Decision...
Deepti
by Deepti  9-26-2008   
 No Remarks
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Nurture affects physiology
tumblon
by tumblon  9-23-2008   
 A study at the University of Minnesota is finding that nurture in early childhood really does matter to the physical structure of the brain.
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Homeland Security Detects Terrorist Threats by Reading Your Mind
rmowery
by rmowery  9-23-2008    2
 Yeah, this is going to go over real well with the ACLU. Guess the only positive aspect is it looks like it runs on windows, so expect lots of blue screens.
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Near-Death Experiences: What Really Happens?
mugofcoffee
by mugofcoffee  9-22-2008   
 No Remarks
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Sweet smells foster sweet dreams
reeds
by reeds  9-22-2008   
 Smell is the only sense that doesn't 'sleep'.
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Beauty and the Brain
Silkweaver
by Silkweaver  9-21-2008    2
 Future work may elucidate the long-term effects of one's surroundings on brain function and the relationship between aesthetically pleasing spaces and their functionality. What one considers beautiful is, of course, influenced by culture, learning, and experience, and not everything we find beautiful will ultimately be traceable to the structure and function of our brain. The larger question "What is beauty?" still poses a major challenge, but answering it no longer seems so impossible.
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Mirror Neuron - Almost everything you wanted to know
Silkweaver
by Silkweaver  9-21-2008   
 Very interesting and educative read: Based on context, mirror neurons can distinguish intention. The activity of the observer’s mirror neurons is greatest for the neat scenario—almost double the amount in the messy one—because drinking is a more fundamental intention than cleaning up.
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The New Science of Fear: Can It Predict Bravery at 13,500 Feet?
einbar
by einbar  9-20-2008   
  "Mujica-Parodi says:"You're kind of like a rubber band, in that when you go up, you come back down right away. You're conserving your sympathetic dominance for when it's actually needed." These results, Mujica-Parodi says, mirror those of my fMRI session. It's not that I stayed cool when I was plummeting toward earth—"You were in actual danger," she says, so "a strong excitatory response was appropriate"—but that when I wasn't falling I suppressed the fear response and conserved my energy. The upshot: I might do well at keeping calm in the face of lethal danger, as most firemen and policemen do. More important, my results seem to reinforce Mujica-Parodi's theory, which could mean that in the future recruiters for the military and law enforcement will have a way to screen applicants for the most suitable training and job assignments. Our conversation turns back to the sky dive. "Would you go again?" Mujica-Parodi asks. "I think so," I tell her. But not right now. Maybe in a fe
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Seek The Spirit
AainaA
by AainaA  9-19-2008    1
 How can a non-material manifestation be captured? By recording energy levels - photography should go beyond formation of colors - for crying out loud, we are living in the 21st century you know!
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British Association Festival of Science 2008
JohnWaterman
by JohnWaterman  9-18-2008   
 Lots more at the site.
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Brain Rules: 12 principles for surviving and thriving at work, home, and school
Lexica
by Lexica  9-17-2008   
 No Remarks
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Beauty and the Brain
Mohir
by Mohir  9-17-2008    3
 Future work may elucidate the long-term effects of one's surroundings on brain function and the relationship between aesthetically pleasing spaces and their functionality. What one considers beautiful is, of course, influenced by culture, learning, and experience, and not everything we find beautiful will ultimately be traceable to the structure and function of our brain. The larger question "What is beauty?" still poses a major challenge, but answering it no longer seems so impossible.
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Why are some people better navigaters?
fewstingscorpio
by fewstingscorpio  9-15-2008   
 http://www.sciencedaily.com/videos/2006/0907-virtual_reality_for_navigation_skills.htm
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We is all on drugs
sicntired
by sicntired  9-14-2008   
 So,it wasn't just E.A.Poe and Lewis Carol.All the great minds dabbled.It doesn't mean your brain turns to mush.That's what happens if you listen to the prohibitionist nonsense spouted by the Harperites.Morality has no place when dealing with the lives of others.
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New form of 'mad cow' disease could infect humans
A53GG4
by A53GG4  9-13-2008   
 No Remarks
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Study helps unlock how the brain sees
pokkets
by pokkets  9-12-2008    1
 They hope to use the findings, to Recreate the capacity to see in Robots, and Artificial Intelligence
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The 'satellite navigation' in our brains
Mohir
by Mohir  9-12-2008    1
 n a follow-up study, Dr Spiers and Professor Maguire used the Playstation2 video game "The Getaway" to examine how taxi drivers use their hippocampus and other brain areas when they navigate. Taxi drivers used the virtual reality simulation to navigate the streets of London whilst lying in an fMRI brain scanner. The researchers found that the hippocampus is most active when the drivers first think about their route and plan ahead. By contrast, activity in a diverse network of other brain areas increases as they encounter road blocks, spot expected landmarks, look at the view and worry about the thoughts of their customers and other drivers. "The hippocampus is crucial for navigation and we use it like a 'sat nav'," says Dr Spiers from the Institute of Behavioural Neuroscience at UCL. "London taxi drivers, who have to know their way around hundreds of thousands of winding streets, have the most refined and powerful innate sat navs, strengthened over years of experience."
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Near-Death Experiences: What Really Happens?
tabsey
by tabsey  9-12-2008    2
 Will the morphine effect the experience?
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How China's Pollution Sniffers Work
fewstingscorpio
by fewstingscorpio  9-11-2008   
 It all comes down to the old snoot... Full article: http://science.howstuffworks.com/pollution-sniffer.htm
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Why Men Cheat
A53GG4
by A53GG4  9-11-2008   
 No Remarks
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Scientists May Have Found Brain’s Center For Self-Control
xpersianx
by xpersianx  9-10-2008   
 No Remarks
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Gandhi Pills? Psychiatrist Argues for Moral Performance Enhancers
Silkweaver
by Silkweaver  9-9-2008    5
 What do you think? Do you already use some substance -- say, marijuana or a prescription painkiller -- not for how it makes you feel, but how it influences your behavior toward other people? Do you consider this "moral pharmacology"?
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Neanderthal Babies: Fast-Growing and Cute
tabsey
by tabsey  9-9-2008   
 No Remarks
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Standing on the Shoulders of Giants
wildcat
by wildcat  9-9-2008   
 Video games are reshaping how we perform and promote science. A review by Seed Mag
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The Coming Convergence
wildcat
by wildcat  9-9-2008   
 The message is clear: the choices we make now will converge to create a near and distant future that will be almost unbelievably wonderful or unimaginably catastrophic, or both. This knowledgeable, fascinating glimpse into the future is a must read for everyone interested in technology, upcoming innovations in business, science fiction, and the future.
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Vitamin linked to brain shrinking
reeds
by reeds  9-9-2008   
 lower levels of Vitamin B12 linked to shrinkage.
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