Across neuroscience, biomedical engineering and artificial intelligence, researchers from Carnegie Mellon University are exploring how pain is measured, understood and treated to support safer, more ...
Learn how our brains store images that help us achieve flashes of insight when looking at seemingly incomprehensible visual tests.
A new study reveals that certain brain regions are more active in people with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) during cognitively demanding tasks. The findings could help inform new ways in which ...
Machine learning is helping neuroscientists organize vast quantities of cells’ genetic data in the latest neurobiological cartography effort.
Our brains relish even brief moments of shared experience. Yet, we often overestimate how successfully we communicate in social interactions.
Morning Overview on MSN
Think you’re the same person every day? This wild brain test says no
Every morning, your brain wakes up slightly different from the day before. Neurons have fired, connections have strengthened or weakened, and memories have been updated or quietly erased. Yet you walk ...
‘Kind of amazing.’ A brain game can cut dementia risk by 25 percent, study shows.
A new study suggests that babies can distinguish between objects at 2 months old, earlier than scientists previously thought.
PsyPost on MSN
The surprising way the brain’s dopamine-rich reward center adapts as a romance matures
A new study published in the journal Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience provides evidence that the human brain processes romantic partners differently than close friends, specifically within ...
The Marcus Autism Center announced it will conduct the largest study of behavior, brain and genomic biomarkers in children across the autism spectrum following a $21.9 million grant from the late ...
WVU Medicine officials and clinicians celebrated the opening of the new WVU Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute Highlands Clinic on Friday. On hand for the event were Douglass Harrison, president and ...
In January, toymaker Mattel released the very first autistic Barbie doll. She’s wearing a loose purple dress and headphones.
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