MELBOURNE: Australian researchers have trained lab-grown brain cells on a silicon computer chip to play the nineties shooter game "Doom" and say they are just scratching the surface of what the ...
The winning photo of this year’s Evident Image of the Year Award, a microscopic photography contest, has revealed mesmerizing ...
By tracking eye movements in zebrafish, researchers identified four different types of sleep, analogous to the complex sleep ...
Living cells cool much slower than our current understanding of heat conduction can explain, according to new research from the University of Tokyo. Researchers have used two techniques—high-speed ...
ScienceAlert on MSN
A Strange Pattern Could Explain The Mysterious Origins of Brain Cancer
Confocal microscope image of a fruit fly brain. (Louise Cheng) Not every region of your brain is equally susceptible to cancer. Over many decades of treating brain cancer, doctors have noticed ...
Leaders from Jupiter's neuroscience institutes hold a geek fest that explains brain health discoveries and why getting the ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Cambridge researchers just wired a lab-grown brain into a spinal cord that twitched real muscle — then found the off-switch that restarts adult nerve regrowth after da…
A tiny clump of lab-grown human brain cells, no bigger than a lentil, sent nerve fibers into a slice of spinal cord tissue ...
Living cells cool much slower than our current understanding of heat conduction can explain, according to new research from the University of Tokyo. Researchers used two techniques - high-speed ...
Digital Camera World on MSN
Microscopic contest-winning image reveals “intriguing parallels” between biology and the cosmos
The winning image of this year’s Evident Image of the Year Award has revealed mesmerizing similarities between the ...
Research in mice reveals a new way that brain plasticity is controlled — providing a long-awaited insight into how critical ...
Post-mitotic neurons in the brain that re-enter the cell cycle quickly succumb to senescence, and this re-entry is more common in Alzheimer's disease, according to a new study. The phenomenon may ...
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