Many people may associate the brain with internal processes, such as thinking. Yet social health also relates to the brain, with interactions being rewarding.
Using a ChatGPT-like AI model, scientists have created a new map of the mouse brain that captures previously uncharted areas of the organ in unprecedented detail.
A new wearable device connects AI directly to the brain, enabling a silent dialogue. This could redefine our identity, consciousness, and agency. Where does the self end, and the machine begin?
8hon MSN
Brain-on-a-chip technology reveals how sepsis and neurodegenerative diseases damage the brain
In lieu of animal experiments, researchers from the University of Rochester are using state-of-the-art microchips with human tissue to better understand how the brain operates under healthy conditions ...
Researchers have pinpointed specific brain cells that control how animals react to social defeat, offering new insight into the biology of dominance and submission.
In the UK, a massive 15 million of us think we drink too much. That's right - more than one in five Brits are concerned about the amount of alcohol they consume.
It’s been a long day at the office and all you want to do is head home and crash out, but you’re expected at a friend’s birthday party. The thought of making ...
The quickest way to recharge? A repeatable, low-friction ritual that meets your nervous system where it is. Feeling wiped out isn’t always about how much you did — it’s about what you did. For ...
2hon MSN
Scientists enlist AI to map regions of the brain in unprecedented detail — and that’s just the start
Researchers say artificial intelligence has helped them create one of the most detailed maps of the mouse brain to date.
11hon MSN
The brain navigates new spaces by 'flickering' between reality and old mental maps, say scientists
Have you ever gotten a flash of a different route you could have taken while stuck in traffic? This isn't just a fleeting thought, but rather a fundamental neurological process, according to findings ...
A study by Dorothy P. Schafer, Ph.D., and Travis E. Faust, Ph.D., at UMass Chan Medical School, explains how two different cell types in the brain—astrocytes and microglia—communicate in response to ...
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