A new study by scientists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) sheds light on how lack of sleep affects the ...
Koch, who studied vision, thought that by measuring people's brain responses as they looked at special optical illusions, ...
ScienceAlert on MSN
A Single Molecule May Explain How Blood Flow in The Brain Triggers Dementia
Reduced blood flow to the brain is thought to be a key factor in many forms of dementia, including Alzheimer's, and ...
New research suggests that auditory hallucinations in schizophrenia may come from a brain glitch that confuses inner thoughts for external voices. Normally, the brain predicts the sound of its own ...
Brain development does not end at 25 but continues into the early 30s as neural networks become more efficient and ...
Factinate on MSN
There's a strange fold in your brain that no one else in the animal kingdom has—and it might explain human imagination
Your brain is wrinkled like a walnut, and those wrinkles aren't just for show. Each fold increases the amount of surface area ...
A large genetic screen has revealed how stem cells transform into brain cells, exposing hundreds of genes that make this ...
A year of consistent exercise appears to rejuvenate the brain – but don’t ask scientists how yet In A Nutshell Adults who ...
Ever noticed how one yawn can trigger many? Science reveals how your brain copies others, why yawns spread so easily, and what this curious habit says about humans.
As emotions rise and fall in everyday life, your brain keeps up, constantly adjusting. These transitions between feelings—like joy, sadness, or fear—aren’t just random reactions. They’re part of a ...
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