Displaying 1 - 20 news posts of 354
Shingles vaccine may slow progression of dementia, new study suggests
The shingles vaccine not only offers protection against the painful viral infection, a new study suggests that the two-dose shot also may slow the progression of dementia
A dementia vaccine could be real, and some of us have taken it without knowing
Getting vaccinated against shingles could protect you from getting dementia, or slow the progression of the disease, says a new study
Life Experiences Leave Molecular Marks on Aging Organs
Knight Initiative scientists report that biology, behavior, and circumstance all intertwine over a lifetime to influence how organs grow old
How to Protect Your Brain
Everything we know now, and what we hope and pray is coming
As neural organoid research accelerates, scientists discuss ethics
Neuroscience experts convened in Asilomar to talk through guidelines around ethical research on human neural organoids
What we can learn from brain organoids
Lab-grown “reductionist replicas” of the human brain are helping scientists understand fetal development and cognitive disorders, including autism. But ethical questions loom.
Scientists and bioethicists call for global oversight of brain organoid research
Scientists and ethicists including Wu Tsai Neuro affiliates Sergiu Pașca and Hank Greely argued for an international process to address the ethical and social questions raised by organoids.
Sensory gatekeeper drives seizures, autism-like behaviors in mouse model
The new work, in mice missing the autism-linked gene CNTNAP2, suggests a mechanism to help explain the overlap between epilepsy and autism.
For Some Patients, the ‘Inner Voice’ May Soon Be Audible
In a recent study, scientists successfully decoded not only the words people tried to say but the words they merely imagined saying.
Your brain could be 'older' than your age—and it's easier than ever to find out
Is your brain aging faster than your chronological age? New research shows it could raise your risk of death and dementia significantly—and offers promise for early intervention.
Your brain reveals a lot about your age
Knight Initiative researchers developed a blood test that track the biological age of the brain and other organs.
Scientists Succeed in Reversing Parkinson’s Symptoms in Mice
The findings of two recent studies give hope that the disease could one day be reversed in humans—but experts warn that this complex disease will likely need multiple complementary treatments.
A breakthrough researchers call ‘magic’ could transform stroke treatment
With support from a Wu Tsai Neuro grant, researchers have developed a potentially game-changing new way to treat a leading cause of death.
Brain health: It's 'biological age' might be able to predict your life span
A new Stanford study used blood proteins to analyze the 'biological' age of brains and other organs compared to the person's actual age.
Stanford researchers develop new tool to measure biological age
The tool, built by a team led by Stanford's Tony Wyss-Coray, uses a single vial of blood to assess the 'biological age' of each organ.
To get from experience to emotion, the brain hits 'sustain'
Wu Tsai Neuro researcher Karl Deisseroth and colleagues drew on a variety of techniques to probe how emotional responses arise in the brain.
Shingles vaccine can decrease risk of dementia, study finds
Knight Initiative–supported research by Pascal Geldsetzer and colleagues adds to evidence that preventing the viral infection can help stave off cognitive decline.
Latest Alzheimer's lab tests focus on memory loss, not brain plaques
New Alzheimer's biomarkers focus on whether Alzheimer's has actually begun to affect a person's thinking and memory, rather than just amyloid levels.
FRAXA-funded research explores ISRIB as a potential treatment for Fragile X
Gordon Wang, director of the Neuroscience Microscopy Service Community Lab at Wu Tsai Neuro, and his team are studying integrated stress response inhibitor (ISRIB) as a potential treatment for Fragile X syndrome, aiming to restore brain function and improve social behavior.
Dopamine "gas pedal" and serotonin "brake" team up to accelerate learning
Mice learn fastest and most reliably when they experience an increase in dopamine paired with an inhibition of serotonin in their nucleus accumbens, a new study shows, helping to resolve long-standing questions about the neuromodulators’ relationship.