#mouse-cortex

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Mindfulness
fromScienceDaily
7 hours ago

Scientists say 7 days of meditation can rewire your brain

Seven days of meditation and mind-body techniques significantly altered brain function, immunity, and metabolism, resembling psychedelic experiences achieved naturally.
#neuroscience
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago
Design

The Future of Brain Health Is Architecture

The built environment significantly influences mental health, mood, and performance, with neuroscience guiding design for improved well-being.
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago
Science

How Meaning Emerges From Brain Circuitry

Meaning arises from distributed, context-dependent neural assemblies that link sensory-motor patterns, learned associations, evolutionary history, and goal-directed circuits to produce 'aboutness.'
Design
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

The Future of Brain Health Is Architecture

The built environment significantly influences mental health, mood, and performance, with neuroscience guiding design for improved well-being.
Medicine
fromWIRED
5 days ago

A New Implant Aims to Rewire Stroke Patients' Brains

Epia Neuro aims to help stroke patients regain hand function using a brain implant and motorized glove.
Science
fromNews Center
6 days ago

Uncovering Cellular Drivers of Increased Brain Signal Activity - News Center

High gamma activity in the brain is generated through complex mechanisms, impacting interpretations of neurological studies using this signal.
#artificial-intelligence
Data science
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

A New Digital Twin for Brain Activity Aims to Speed Research

A new AI model can predict human brain activity from various stimuli, accelerating neuroscience research and understanding of the brain.
Medicine
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

Building Wisdom With BDNF-and Ketamine

BDNF is crucial for brain health, and can be boosted through healthy habits and ketamine, aiding neuroplasticity and cognitive function.
SF food
fromNature
1 week ago

Aversive learning hijacks a brain sugar sensor to consolidate memory - Nature

Nutrient sensors in the brain and digestive tract regulate appetite, feeding behavior, and cognitive processes related to memory and learning.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 week ago

How human neurons on a chip learned to play Doom

Cortical Labs demonstrated living human neurons playing Doom, showcasing adaptive learning and potential applications in computing and drug testing.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

How to Think About the Brain

The brain operates through localization, with specific areas dedicated to distinct tasks, despite outdated and simplistic representations of its function.
Productivity
fromFast Company
2 weeks ago

5 neuroscience-backed tips for beating procrastination

Cognitive overload, not procrastination, hinders progress on important projects, causing the brain to shift to survival mode and avoid challenging tasks.
fromNature
2 weeks ago

Adaptive evolution of gene regulatory networks in mammalian neocortex - Nature

To characterize CREs and TFs for neocortical ExNs, we used Arpp21-Gfp or Fezf2-Gfp transgenic mice and enriched GFP-expressing neocortical upper layer (L2-4) intratelencephalic (IT) neurons or deep layer (L5-6) predominantly extratelencephalic (ET) neurons, respectively, from neonatal mice (postnatal day (PD) 0), an age at which neocortical ExN identity and connectivity are established.
Roam Research
Science
fromNews Center
1 week ago

Light Impacts How the Brain Perceives and Remembers Threats - News Center

Light influences how animals perceive threats and make risk avoidance decisions, impacting understanding of related human behaviors and disorders.
fromTheregister
3 weeks ago

Digital fruit fly brain model walks and cleans its feelers

The researchers at Eon Systems have taken several pre-existing components: a fruit fly brain scan, a tool for modelling neurons, a model of some of the fly's muscles and body, and a very simple virtual environment, connected them together and ran it. The team claims that the result displays some of the behavior of the real insect.
OMG science
Artificial intelligence
fromThe Verge
3 weeks ago

This is not a fly uploaded to a computer

Eon Systems claimed to create a digital fly brain emulation, but provided no scientific verification, peer review, or detailed methodology—only social media videos that generated hype through influencer endorsements.
Science
fromNature
1 week ago

First atlas of brain organization shows development over a lifetime

Scientists created an atlas mapping brain connectivity patterns across the human lifespan, linking them to cognitive performance and potential developmental issues.
OMG science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 weeks ago

Scientists built a tickle robot to solve one of biology's strangest mysteries

Neuroscientists use Hektor, a tickle robot, to systematically study the neurological and physiological mechanisms of ticklishness by measuring brain activity, facial expressions, heart rate, and other bodily responses.
#brain-initiative
Data science
fromNational Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
1 month ago

BRAIN Initiative: Data Archives for the BRAIN Initiative

The BRAIN Initiative data ecosystem provides domain-specific archives for long-term storage, curation, and community access to neuroscience research data, with continued funding essential for maintaining reproducible pipelines and accommodating exponential data growth.
Data science
fromNational Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
1 month ago

BRAIN Initiative: Data Archives for the BRAIN Initiative

The BRAIN Initiative data ecosystem provides domain-specific archives for long-term storage, curation, and community access to neuroscience research data, with continued funding essential for maintaining reproducible pipelines and accommodating exponential data growth.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
3 weeks ago

What's it like to be a bat? Scientists develop new solution to the puzzle of animal minds

A new 'teleonome' framework evaluates animal welfare by understanding each species' evolutionary needs rather than isolated physiological measurements.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
1 week ago

Retraction Note: Multisensory learning binds neurons into a cross-modal memory engram

The article has been retracted due to irreproducible voltage imaging results and errors in data analysis, despite some conclusions being substantiated.
#biological-computing
OMG science
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 weeks ago

A petri dish of human brain cells is currently playing Doom. Should we be worried?

Scientists have created biological computers using lab-grown human brain cells that learn to play video games, demonstrating neural tissue can process information and adapt behavior in digital environments.
Science
fromFuturism
2 weeks ago

Staff at New Data Center Powered by Human Brain Cells Need to Swap Out Cerebrospinal Fluid Every Day

Cortical Labs' biological computers require constant replenishment of cerebrospinal fluid and have unique operational needs compared to traditional data centers.
Science
fromFuturism
3 weeks ago

New Data Centers Will Be Powered by Human Brain Cells

Cortical Labs is building biological data centers using living human neurons as computing units, consuming far less power than traditional AI processors.
Science
fromTheregister
3 weeks ago

Inside datacenter where day starts with cerebrospinal fluid

Cortical Labs operates biological computers powered by living neurons that require daily maintenance with cerebrospinal fluid and precise atmospheric conditions to function and learn faster than classical computers while consuming less energy.
OMG science
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 weeks ago

A petri dish of human brain cells is currently playing Doom. Should we be worried?

Scientists have created biological computers using lab-grown human brain cells that learn to play video games, demonstrating neural tissue can process information and adapt behavior in digital environments.
Science
fromFuturism
2 weeks ago

Staff at New Data Center Powered by Human Brain Cells Need to Swap Out Cerebrospinal Fluid Every Day

Cortical Labs' biological computers require constant replenishment of cerebrospinal fluid and have unique operational needs compared to traditional data centers.
Science
fromFuturism
3 weeks ago

New Data Centers Will Be Powered by Human Brain Cells

Cortical Labs is building biological data centers using living human neurons as computing units, consuming far less power than traditional AI processors.
Science
fromTheregister
3 weeks ago

Inside datacenter where day starts with cerebrospinal fluid

Cortical Labs operates biological computers powered by living neurons that require daily maintenance with cerebrospinal fluid and precise atmospheric conditions to function and learn faster than classical computers while consuming less energy.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
3 weeks ago

Psychology says people who remember the exact location of every item in their childhood home - which drawer, which shelf, which cupboard - aren't sentimental, their brain mapped that house the way a body maps a minefield, and the precision that looks like nostalgia is actually surveillance that never turned off - Silicon Canals

Detailed childhood home memories reflect survival-based hypervigilance rather than nostalgia, with brains mapping familiar spaces like tactical terrain to navigate unpredictable or chaotic environments.
Science
fromNature
1 week ago

Functional hierarchy of the human neocortex across the lifespan - Nature

Brain network organization changes across the lifespan, revealing functional connectivity gradients that relate to cognitive and behavioral outcomes.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 weeks ago

The gut microbiome may influence brain aging, mouse study suggests

Young, two-month-old lab mice housed with older, 18-month-old mice showed really impaired cognition. Researchers exposed young mice raised in a sterile, microbe-free environment to gut bacteria from old mice, causing the younger animals to perform worse on cognitive tests, as if they had prematurely aged, just like the cohoused mice.
Medicine
US news
fromwww.npr.org
1 month ago

Scientists make a pocket-sized AI brain with help from monkey neurons

Scientists compressed an AI visual system model from 60 million to 10,000 variables while maintaining performance, revealing how biological brains achieve efficiency and potentially advancing both neuroscience and artificial intelligence.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
3 weeks ago

The Evolution of Brain and Intelligence

Human brains are large and complex but not uniquely so compared to other species; human intelligence is adapted to specific ecological niches, with symbolic reasoning being a key cognitive distinction from other animals.
Science
fromFuturism
2 weeks ago

Scientists Bring Mouse Brains Back to Life After "Cryosleep" Deep Freeze

Researchers are advancing towards cryosleep by restoring activity in mouse brains using vitrification, potentially aiding organ preservation and brain injury recovery.
Mindfulness
Forgetting is essential for human functioning, filtering irrelevant information and enabling emotional recovery, though it creates practical problems with necessary tasks that require deliberate memory strategies.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
3 weeks ago

I used to think I had a terrible memory until I realized I can recall every tone shift in every argument my parents ever had but not what I ate yesterday. My memory works fine. It was just trained on threat detection instead of daily life. - Silicon Canals

People from unpredictable environments develop heightened memory for threat signals and emotional cues as a survival mechanism, not a memory deficiency.
Miscellaneous
fromNature
1 month ago

Vectorized instructive signals in cortical dendrites - Nature

Learning involves synaptic strength changes, but how the brain solves credit assignment—determining which synapses to modify for improved performance—remains unknown, unlike artificial neural networks using backpropagation.
#brain-stimulation
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
4 weeks ago

Can Brain Stimulation Make Us More Altruistic?

Synchronizing brain activity between frontal and parietal regions through electrical stimulation increases altruistic choices, particularly when personal costs are high.
Science
fromFuturism
3 weeks ago

Researchers Upload Fly's Brain to Matrix, Let It Control Virtual Body

Eon Systems created a computational model of a fruit fly's 125,000 neurons and 50 million synapses that exhibits multiple behaviors in a virtual environment with 95% accuracy in predicting motor behavior.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

The Feeling of Learning Can Be a Psychological Illusion

Cognitive fluency—the ease of processing information—creates an illusion of learning that often fails to translate into actual skill or long-term retention.
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Could Glial Cells Be the Key to New Schizophrenia Treatments?

Anyone living with schizophrenia understands the true limitations of current treatment options. Antipsychotics remain the single leading treatment for the disorder, and they are riddled with undesirable side effects. Weight gain, tardive dyskinesia, and excessive drowsiness are a few. Much research is devoted to expanding the range of medication options, and few academics have pursued other avenues. However, there is a possibility that treatment for schizophrenia can be approached through cellular methods if long-term research validates early signs of hope.
Mental health
Science
fromNature
3 weeks ago

Scientists revive activity in frozen mouse brains for the first time

German researchers successfully cryopreserved and thawed mouse brains while preserving some neuronal functionality using vitrification, advancing toward potential future applications in brain protection and organ banking.
#brain-plasticity
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago
Psychology

Neuroplasticity Across the Lifespan

Brain plasticity enables structural and functional changes throughout life, but remains constrained by biological boundaries and developmental timing.
fromNature
1 month ago
Science

Daily briefing: Exercise rewires the brain for endurance, in mice

Repeated exercise sessions rewire the brain, making neurons faster to activate and enabling improved running endurance.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Neuroplasticity Across the Lifespan

Brain plasticity enables structural and functional changes throughout life, but remains constrained by biological boundaries and developmental timing.
fromFast Company
17 years ago

Talking About Nerve!

I received an email recently that claims Wal-Mart senior management has been calling mandatory meetings for the company's employees in which the employees are told they "cannot" vote for the Obama-Biden ticket "or any other employee-friendly, union-friendly candidates for political office". It's not an urban legend, according to the sources I checked. This makes me so angry I just boil. When it comes to the Constitution, I am a rabid supporter.
fromMail Online
3 weeks ago

Incredible map reveals how the brain processes different emotions

They created an artificial 'mental map', with pleasantness along one axis and bodily reactions along the other, and charted how the brain responded while watching clips from films. The results revealed clear groupings in the way that our brains represent emotion - with guilt, anger and disgust in one corner and happiness, satisfaction and pride in the other.
Science
#neuroplasticity
fromAeon
2 months ago
Philosophy

What the metaphor of 'rewiring' gets wrong about neuroplasticity | Aeon Essays

fromAeon
2 months ago
Philosophy

What the metaphor of 'rewiring' gets wrong about neuroplasticity | Aeon Essays

fromFast Company
1 month ago

Our brains are wired to ignore information. Here are neuroscience-backed tips for communicating memorably

The human brain is engineered to ignore most of what it sees and hears, according to the neuroscientists I interviewed for the audio original Viral Voices. If that's the case, how are you supposed to make a memorable impression? The empowering news is that if you understand how the brain works, what it discards, and what it pays attention to, you'll be far more persuasive than you've ever imagined. Persuasive people have influence in their personal and professional lives.
Philosophy
Education
fromFast Company
2 months ago

7 ways to learn faster and improve your memory, backed by neuroscience

Active retrieval practice and interleaving improve learning speed, retention, and confidence while revealing knowledge gaps to focus further study.
fromScienceDaily
2 months ago

MRI scans show exercise can make the brain look younger

We found that a simple, guideline-based exercise program can make the brain look measurably younger over just 12 months. Many people worry about how to protect their brain health as they age. Studies like this offer hopeful guidance grounded in everyday habits. These absolute changes were modest, but even a one-year shift in brain age could matter over the course of decades.
Health
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 weeks ago

Short films made from brain activity of mice aim to show how they see world

Scientists reconstructed pixelated movies from mouse brain activity to understand how animals perceive visual information, advancing knowledge of animal cognition and brain function.
fromFuturism
2 months ago

Researchers Just Discovered Something Startling About How Conservatives Pick Political Positions

As it turns out, neuroscience might be able to explain why. In a new study whose findings will surprise absolutely no one who's endured a fiery holiday dinner debate, researchers discovered that conservative and liberal brains don't just arrive at fundamentally different conclusions, but take strikingly different paths to get there. It's a fascinating piece of research which just might explain something about the yawning political divides currently tearing society apart.
US politics
Productivity
fromFast Company
1 month ago

Keep forgetting things? To improve your memory and recall, science says start taking notes (by hand)

Meetings often reduce participants' cognitive performance and lowering meeting volume can substantially increase overall employee productivity.
Philosophy
fromMail Online
2 months ago

Scientist claims your memories are merely illusions

The Boltzmann Brain hypothesis proposes that current memories may be spontaneous random-fluctuation brain states rather than reliable records of an external past.
fromSilicon Canals
1 month ago

What neuroscience reveals about people who replay conversations in their head for hours after they happen - Silicon Canals

Neuroscientists have a name for the brain network that fires up when you're not focused on an external task: the default mode network, or DMN. It's the constellation of regions - the medial prefrontal cortex, posterior cingulate cortex, and angular gyrus among them - that hums to life when you daydream, reflect on yourself, or think about other people's mental states.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

AI-Decoded Brain Signals May Help Paralyzed Regain Movement

Artificial intelligence (AI) machine learning is making a difference in assistive technology to help restore movement for the paralyzed. A new study in the American Institute of Physics journal APL Bioengineering shows how AI has the potential to restore lower-limb functions in those with severe spinal cord injuries (SCIs) by identifying patterns in brain signals captured noninvasively via electroencephalography (EEG).
Artificial intelligence
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

When Memory Worries Deserve Attention

Most people will forget a name, misplace their phone, or lose track of a conversation at some point. Usually, those moments pass without much thought. But for many adults, especially as they age, small lapses can trigger a much deeper fear: Is this the beginning of cognitive decline? As a neurologist, I hear this concern often. And as a researcher, I have learned something important: Worry about cognition and cognitive disease are not the same thing.
Mental health
Medicine
fromenglish.elpais.com
2 months ago

Discovery of brain network that links body and mind could open the door to better Parkinson's treatments

Altered activity in the somatocognitive action network (SCAN) connects deep brain regions and cortical areas, linking motor, attention, perception, and action-planning deficits in Parkinson's.
Artificial intelligence
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Mental Murmuration: A Metaphor for the Workings of the Brain

Neural processing consists of fluid, distributed patterns of activation across interconnected networks that function collectively like a murmuration, not as a container of discrete informational bits.
OMG science
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

The Divided Brain: How Two Halves Create One Mind

Brain hemispheres are structurally and functionally specialized yet continuously communicate via the corpus callosum, with contralateral control enhancing perceptual and motor efficiency.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

How the Brain Chooses What Matters

Selective sensory prioritization can improve clarity by letting one modality dominate when multisensory integration would create competition or reduce precision.
Science
fromFuturism
1 month ago

Lab-Grown Brains Growing More Powerful

Lab-grown brain organoids can now process information in real time and solve complex engineering problems, marking a major advancement in neuroscience research.
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

AI Spots Brain Disorders in Seconds From Scans

According to University of Michigan neuroscientists, not only can their AI vision language model diagnose neurological disorders from MRI scans with high performance accuracy, but it also has foundation model capabilities, making it a flexible, general-purpose solution that can be tailored for a wide variety of medical imaging. "These results demonstrate that Prima has foundation model properties, and reported performance will continue to improve with additional health system training data and larger compute budgets," wrote the study's authors in the preprint.
Artificial intelligence
Medicine
fromHarvard Gazette
2 months ago

New AI tool predicts brain age, dementia risk, cancer survival - Harvard Gazette

BrainIAC, a brain imaging adaptive core, accurately extracts multiple disease risk signals from routine brain MRIs using self-supervised learning and limited training data.
Science
fromNature
1 month ago

This compound enhances long-term memory of mice - but only in females

Acetate, a metabolic by-product from alcohol, glucose, and fiber breakdown, enhances memory performance in female mice through histone acetylation in the hippocampus.
Medicine
fromScienceDaily
2 months ago

The fat you can't see could be shrinking your brain

Fat distribution—especially pancreatic fat and 'skinny fat'—predicts accelerated brain aging and greater risk of cognitive decline independent of overall obesity.
Science
fromNews Center
1 month ago

Living 'Mini Brains' Meet Next-Generation Bioelectronics - News Center

Scientists developed a soft 3D electronic mesh that wraps around human neural organoids, enabling comprehensive mapping and manipulation of neural activity across entire miniature brain structures for the first time.
fromNature
2 months ago

Still conscious? Brain marker signals when anaesthesia takes hold

They then used emerging mathematical methods to isolate signals originating from nine brain regions previously implicated in mediating consciousness and examined connections between pairs of these regions. Among them were the parietal cortex, which is at the top of the brain about halfway between the forehead and the back of the skull; the occipital cortex, at the back of the head; and several small, deeper structures, such as one called the thalamus.
Medicine
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Daily Prophets: How Your Brain Predicts the Future

I am a worrier, and have been for most of my life. At some point, someone dear and smart teased me that I worry about the wrong things. The things that hit me, she noted, were never the things I worried about. For a while that left me feeling like an incompetent worrier-until my research caught up. I realized that the things I worry about often don't end up hurting me precisely because worrying helps me diffuse them ahead of time.
Psychology
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Can the Mere Sight of Something Tempting Affect Your Memory?

Heavier drinkers show attention narrowing: alcohol images are remembered better but impair memory for immediately subsequent items.
Psychology
fromFast Company
2 months ago

A neuroscientist's 5-step plan to upgrade your brain

Metacognition—thinking about and evaluating one's thinking—significantly increases goal attainment and can be taught to improve performance.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
1 month ago

Author Correction: Natural behaviour is learned through dopamine-mediated reinforcement

A .dat-to-.wav conversion error clamped audio values to 1 for 15.9% of data; analyses and figures were updated; results and conclusions remain unchanged.
Psychology
fromWIRED
2 months ago

A Brain Mechanism Explains Why People Leave Certain Tasks for Later

A ventral striatum–ventral pallidum circuit reduces motivation and causes postponement of actions when those actions are associated with anticipated unpleasant experiences.
fromFast Company
1 month ago

How hesitation is a fundamental brain feature, according to neuroscientists

At the Winter Olympics, skiers, bobsledders, speedskaters, and many other athletes all have to master one critical moment: when to start. That split second is paramount during competition because when everyone is strong and skilled, a moment of hesitation can separate gold from silver. A competitor who hesitates too much will be left behind -but moving too early will get them disqualified.
Science
fromFuturism
2 months ago

Scientists Preparing to Simulate Human Brain on Supercomputer

The team, which is being led by Jülich neurophysics professor Markus Diesmann, will leverage the Joint Undertaking Pioneer for Innovative and Transformative Exascale Research (JUPITER) supercomputer for their simulation. JUPITER is currently the fourth most powerful supercomputer in the world according to the TOP500 list, and features thousands of graphical processing units. The team demonstrated last month that a " spiking neural network " could be scaled up and run on JUPITER, effectively matching the cerebral cortex's 20 billion neurons and 100 trillion connections.
Science
Science
fromNature
2 months ago

Many people have no mental imagery. What's going on in their brains?

Approximately 4% of people have aphantasia, experiencing little or no visual mental imagery despite retaining conceptual and verbal knowledge.
Science
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

How the Cerebellum Helps Words Flow From Your Brain

A right posterior cerebellar region partners with left-hemisphere language centers to support fluency, sharing neural mechanisms with physical coordination across hemispheres.
fromBig Think
2 months ago

Computational model discovers new types of neurons hidden in decade-old dataset

There was a group of neurons that predicted the wrong answer, yet they kept getting stronger as the model learned. So we went back to the original macaque data, and the same signal was there, hiding in plain sight. It wasn't a quirk of the model - the monkeys' brains were doing it too. Even as their performance improved, both the real and simulated brains maintained a reserve of neurons that continued to predict the incorrect answer.
Science
Science
fromFast Company
2 months ago

Neuroscience just showed how 1 type of activity stops your brain from aging

Regular engagement in creative activities correlates with younger brain age, stronger neural connections, and greater benefits for higher expertise, with dancing adding physical advantages.
Science
fromDefector
2 months ago

What A Week Of Freedom Can Do For A Lab Mouse | Defector

Environmental complexity profoundly reduces learned fear and anxiety in laboratory-reared mice after rewilding.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 months ago

Why Your Brain Puts Off Doing Unpleasant Tasks

A ventral striatum–ventral pallidum circuit in macaque brains acts as a motivation brake, and suppressing it reduces hesitation for unpleasant tasks.
fromFast Company
2 months ago

How to train your brain like your muscles, according to a neurologist

It might come as a surprise to learn that the brain responds to training in much the same way as our muscles, even though most of us never think about it that way. Clear thinking, focus, creativity, and good judgment are built through challenge, when the brain is asked to stretch beyond routine rather than run on autopilot. That slight mental discomfort is often the sign that the brain is actually being trained, a lot like that good workout burn in your muscles.
Science
Science
fromwww.nature.com
2 months ago

Pyramidal neurons proportionately alter cortical interneuron subtypes

Pyramidal neurons regulate survival and differentiation of specific cortical interneuron subtypes, aligning interneuron abundance with pyramidal partner prevalence via activity-dependent and ligand-mediated mechanisms.
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