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fromwww.npr.org
17 hours ago

In the brain, objects seen and imagined follow the same neural path

"I can look at an object in the world around me, but I can also close my eyes and imagine the object," says Varun Wadia, highlighting the dual capability of visual perception and imagination.
Science
Artificial intelligence
fromFuturism
4 hours ago

AI Use Appears to Have a "Boiling Frog" Effect on Human Cognition, New Study Warns

AI assistance in cognitive tasks can impair intellectual ability and persistence despite initial performance improvements.
Medicine
fromPsychology Today
9 hours ago

Polyvagal Theory Has Not Been "Debunked"

Polyvagal theory's clinical tools remain valuable despite critiques of its mechanisms, emphasizing the importance of effective frameworks for trauma therapies.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago

Neuroscience reveals that the calmest person in any crisis isn't naturally fearless - their brain learned to delay panic because their childhood required them to be functional before they were allowed to be afraid - Silicon Canals

Calmness under pressure is a learned response, not merely a personality trait or temperament.
Productivity
fromPerevillega
3 weeks ago

Building Agent Memory That Survives Between Sessions | Pere Villega

Memory in Claude Code sessions is a design problem requiring deliberate creation of context to avoid repetitive explanations.
#decision-making
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

Craving Drives Bad Decisions, Relapse, and Drug Use

Craving is a core process that drives behavior and relapse in addiction, reshaping decision-making and brain systems.
Science
fromNews Center
1 week 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.
SF food
fromNature
3 weeks 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.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 weeks ago

That minty fresh feeling? Scientists now know how our bodies feel cold

The protein in the new study is called TRPM8, and it acts as the body's primary receptor for sensing both menthol and cold temperatures. It's a channel embedded in cell membranes that opens when triggered by dropping temperatures or cooling agents.
OMG science
Science
fromNews Center
2 weeks 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.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
3 weeks ago

Human vision: what we actually see - and don't see - tells us a lot about consciousness

Significant visual processing occurs unconsciously in the brain, as demonstrated by blindsight and inattentional blindness phenomena where people perceive visual information without conscious awareness.
Productivity
fromFast Company
3 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.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 weeks 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.
OMG science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
4 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.
fromNature
4 weeks ago

Dopamine takes a hit: how neuroscience is rethinking the 'feel-good' chemical

Dopamine is one of the most extensively studied neurotransmitters, chemicals that convey signals from cell to cell. It's the one with the highest profile outside neuroscience: often known as the 'pleasure chemical', it's depicted as the hit of reward that people get from recreational drugs or scrolling through social media. That's a gross simplification of what dopamine does; on that, researchers agree.
Medicine
Artificial intelligence
fromThe Verge
4 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.
Data science
fromNature
1 month ago

AI can 'same-ify' human expression - can some brains resist its pull?

Large language models are homogenizing human writing styles, reasoning methods, and perspectives, potentially creating widespread sameness in discourse even among non-direct AI users.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks 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.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 month ago

Music even makes you blink to the beat

Our eyes—which we usually think of as purely visual organs—spontaneously dance to the rhythm of what we hear, says study co-author Du Yi, a cognitive neuroscientist at the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing. Using a high-speed eye-tracking system, Du and her team were stunned to discover nonmusicians instinctively blinking in sync with the beat structure of Bach chorales.
Berlin music
Pets
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 month ago

The real science behind the mind-melding world of Hoppers

Hoppers blends fantastical animal communication with real consciousness research, exploring scientifically plausible concepts like consciousness transfer and animal communication decoding.
Philosophy
fromBig Think
1 month ago

Consciousness may be more than the brain's output - it may be an input, too

Consciousness remains scientifically inaccessible through third-person observation, yet a radical theory proposes consciousness can physically influence brain dynamics and leave measurable traces.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

When Even a Neuroscientist Feels Overwhelmed

Modern crises create a 'Traumademic' where overlapping global and personal stressors trigger emotional hijacking, causing the ancient feeling brain to override rational thinking through constantly activated alarm systems.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
3 weeks ago

Why We Still Want the Snack

Brain reward responses to food cues persist even after eating to fullness, potentially driving overeating independent of actual hunger signals.
Science
fromFuturism
1 month 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
fromSilicon Canals
3 weeks ago

Neuroscience reveals that people who feel trapped in repetitive daily routines aren't lazy or unmotivated. Their dopamine system has downregulated to match the predictability, which means the routine didn't kill their motivation - it quietly rewired their brain to stop expecting anything worth anticipating. - Silicon Canals

Overly predictable routines suppress dopamine and motivation by eliminating the uncertainty that drives anticipation, causing emotional numbness despite external life satisfaction.
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.
Artificial intelligence
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Anti-Intelligence: When Language Operates Without a Mind

AI generates language through a fundamentally different structural architecture than human cognition, not through inferior intelligence but through inverted processes detached from lived experience and stakes.
#neuroscience
fromSilicon Canals
3 weeks ago
Psychology

Behavioral scientists found that the human brain doesn't actually crave constant novelty. It craves pattern recognition and mastery, which means the person who finds genuine pleasure in their morning walk along the same route is neurologically closer to fulfillment than the person who needs every weekend to feel like an event - Silicon Canals

Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
3 weeks ago

Behavioral scientists found that the human brain doesn't actually crave constant novelty. It craves pattern recognition and mastery, which means the person who finds genuine pleasure in their morning walk along the same route is neurologically closer to fulfillment than the person who needs every weekend to feel like an event - Silicon Canals

The brain's reward circuits respond more strongly to mastery and pattern recognition within familiar structures than to constant novelty-seeking.
fromMail Online
1 month 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
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
3 weeks ago

People who get inexplicably emotional when someone is unexpectedly kind to them aren't fragile - their nervous system has a very specific expectation of how the world operates, and genuine unprompted kindness violates that expectation so completely that the body doesn't have a prepared response and defaults to the only honest reaction it has left - Silicon Canals

Unexpected kindness triggers emotional responses because nervous systems trained by conditional or rare kindness struggle to process genuine, unconditional care that violates their learned expectations.
Miscellaneous
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

How Non-Traumatic Events Trigger Trauma Responses

Emotional dysregulation causes some individuals to experience trauma responses to non-traumatic events, leading to chronic nervous system overstimulation and impaired daily functioning that improves through desensitization and exposure.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
4 weeks ago

Research suggests that people who feel physically uncomfortable receiving compliments aren't awkward. Their nervous system learned to treat positive attention as the thing that usually came right before conditions were attached. - Silicon Canals

Discomfort when receiving praise stems from nervous system conditioning in childhood where positive attention preceded emotional withdrawal or criticism, not from personality flaws.
Marketing tech
fromThe Drum
2 months ago

Why the future of ad testing might live inside your head

Clinical-grade EEG headsets measure real-time emotion and predict ad performance, shifting campaign testing from surveys to brain data.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
1 month 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.
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.
Mindfulness
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

From Neurons to Networks

AI evolved into a psychological mirror that externalizes attention and imagination, challenging emotion, meaning, relational depth, and requiring mindfulness to preserve human agency.
Food & drink
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

The Dopamine Aisle of the Supermarket

67% of Americans use snacks and treats for mood improvement, spending $526 annually, while 49% purchase takeout for comfort at $598 yearly, driven by dopamine's role in the brain's reward system.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
1 month 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.
Education
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

The Automatic Reflex That's Killing Our Ability to Think

Relying on AI summaries short-circuits personal thinking, reduces tolerance for productive confusion, and undermines the deeper cognitive work necessary for meaningful assessment and problem-solving.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

How Does the Brain Know Itself?

Introspection provides direct empirical contact with physical reality through interoception and neural integration, where bodily sensations become emotional and self-aware experiences via the insula and prefrontal cortex.
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Prediction, Survival, and the Origins of Feeling

According to the Free Energy Principle (FEP), developed by theoretical neuroscientist Karl Friston and colleagues, much of what the brain does can be understood as minimizing such mismatches—a technical form of 'surprise' defined as the improbability of sensory input given an internal model. The proposal brings perception, action, learning, and decision-making under a single framework.
Science
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.
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
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
1 month 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.
Science
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

How the Brain Interprets Faces Into Social Messages

Facial expressions emerge from coordinated activity across multiple brain regions operating on different timescales, from rapid motor signals to slower stable representations, creating socially meaningful and well-coordinated gestures.
Medicine
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 months ago

Brain training may boost immune response to vaccines

Activating reward-related deep-brain regions via neurofeedback enhances antibody responses to vaccines, showing trained brain activity can strengthen immune response.
#nervous-system
#brain-stimulation
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
1 month 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.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
1 month 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.
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.
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.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

It's About Time: Timing Issues in Consciously Guided Action

The conscious field enables simultaneous evaluation of stimuli processed at different speeds, allowing their associated action plans to collectively influence action selection.
Philosophy
fromBig Think
2 months ago

The brain-deep emotion that matters more than happiness

Joy differs from happiness: it coexists with pain, is not dependent on circumstances, and sustains people when happiness cannot.
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

The Real Science of Smell and Attraction

Unlike sight or sound, smell has a direct pathway to the amygdala and hippocampus-the regions involved in emotion and autobiographical memory. Because of this connection, memories triggered by scent are often more vivid and emotionally intense than those triggered by sight.
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
Philosophy
fromAeon
2 months ago

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

The metaphor 'rewiring the brain' oversimplifies neuroplasticity by implying mechanical, rapid fixes that don't reflect biology's slower, messier, and often incomplete changes.
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.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
1 month ago

Psychology says the people who remember exact dates, what someone was wearing, and the precise words used during painful moments aren't holding grudges. Their memory encoded the detail because their nervous system classified that moment as a survival event - Silicon Canals

Emotionally significant events create vivid 'flashbulb memories' through amygdala activation and stress hormones, prioritizing survival-relevant information over mundane details.
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Why Your Eyes Like What Your Eyes Like

Real estate with ocean views, stunning mountain vistas, and wide-open green spaces sell at premium prices because humans find those settings pleasing [1-5]. Certain color combinations in fashion-such as brown and forest green-blend harmoniously, while others, such as hot pink and orange, clash. And our eyes like certain proportions in visual objects (like buildings and human faces) but not others.
Science
Science
fromFast Company
2 months ago

Neuroscience just discovered a weird way to tell when someone is really listening to you

People blink less when they concentrate harder on listening, so decreased blink rate can indicate attentive listening.
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
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 months ago

String Theory May Have a New Neuroscientific Niche

Mathematical tools from string-theory contexts can model biological branching networks such as neuronal wiring without implying a fundamental link between string theory and consciousness.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
1 month ago

What neuroscience reveals about people who cry easily and why it signals a nervous system that processes the world more deeply, not more weakly - Silicon Canals

Frequent crying reflects heightened sensory processing sensitivity and deeper cognitive processing, not emotional fragility or malfunction.
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
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
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.
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
Psychology
fromeLearning Industry
2 months ago

Vicarious Conditioning: Definition, Examples, And How It Works In Psychology

Individuals acquire behaviors, fears, and emotional responses by observing others, forming learned associations without needing direct personal experience.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Why Perception Isn't Just What We Sense

Perception is constructed by the brain using multisensory integration and shortcuts, producing illusions and differing sensory interpretations in autism and ADHD.
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
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.
Psychology
fromeLearning Industry
2 months ago

Fight, Flight, Or Freeze? Why Overwhelmed Learners Shut Down

The freeze response impairs learners by causing hypoarousal and prefrontal downregulation, producing numbness, inaction, and difficulty completing tasks under perceived threat or overload.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

I see time as a grid in my mind. I remember the birthdays of friends I haven't seen for 65 years

Did someone with spatial-sequence synaesthesia design the calendar app on mobile phones? Because that's how time and dates look in my brain. If you say a date to me, that day appears in a grid diagram in my head, and it shows if that box is already imprinted with a holiday, event or someone's birthday. Public holidays and special events like Christmas and Easter are already imprinted for the year, and the diagram goes backwards to about 100,000BC
Psychology
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