New research from the Mark and Mary Stevens Neuroimaging and Informatics Institute (Stevens INI) at the Keck School of ...
Depression affects millions of people worldwide, but much is still unknown about this illness and treatments don't always work. Ph.D. candidate Jesper Pilmeyer examined patients' brains using MRI ...
How does the brain manage to catch the drift of a mumbled sentence or a flat, robotic voice? A new study led by researchers at Reichman University's Baruch Ivcher School of Psychology and the Dina ...
For decades, scientists have mapped attention, memory, language, and reasoning to separate brain networks — yet one big mystery remained: why does the mind feel like a single, unified system?
A study flowchart employing bidirectional two-sample Mendelian randomization analysis to investigate causal relationships between epilepsy subtypes and brain functional and structural connectivity. A ...
There's a quiet irony at the center of modern neuroscience. The more precisely researchers can peer inside the brain, with ...
Motor imagery electroencephalography (EEG) signals depict changes in brain activity during imagined limb movements. Conventional methods, however, often fail to capture these spatiotemporal variations ...
A new study links low plasma vitamin C levels to reduced gray matter and broken Default Mode Network connectivity.
In recent years, breakthroughs in imaging have changed our ability to study the brain, providing a variety of modalities with varying resolution, penetration, and sensitivity. In neuropharmacology, ...
The human brain contains nearly 86 billion neurons, constantly exchanging messages like an immense social media network, but neurons do not work alone – glial cells, neurotransmitters, receptors, and ...
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