Displaying 41 - 60 news posts of 1424
As neural organoid research accelerates, scientists discuss ethics
Neuroscience experts convened in Asilomar to talk through guidelines around ethical research on human neural organoids
Could brain implants read our thoughts? (Not yet)
Join us as we talk with Erin Kunz about building brain-computer interfaces to restore speech to people with paralysis, and recent research testing whether this technology could accidentally read out private thoughts
A new ultrasound technique could help aging and injured brains
Neuroradiologist Raag Airan and his lab have found a non-invasive, drug-free method to help clean the brain, reduce inflammation, and treat disease—and with Knight Initiative for Brain Resilience support, they plan to test it in people soon.
Surya Ganguli named AI2050 Senior Fellow
The Neurosciences Theory Center member has been awarded a senior fellowship through the Schmidt Sciences Foundation's AI2050 program.
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.
‘Mind-blowing’ new perspectives on brain health and disease
The Knight Initiative’s Fall Symposium featured researchers building new molecular atlases of the brain alongside new updates on neurodegenerative disease and what might be done about it.
‘Our goal is to build bridges between the lab and the classroom’
By studying why some kids struggle to read, cognitive neuroscientist Jason Yeatman hopes to make education work better for all students and deepen science’s understanding of the brain.
Wu Tsai Neuro welcomes 2025 Stanford Interdisciplinary Graduate Fellows
Stanford doctoral students spanning neuroscience, chemical engineering, and electrical engineering are developing innovative approaches to understanding the brain and links between it and the body.
NeuroForecasting: how brain activity can predict stock prices or viral videos
Join us as we talk with Brian Knutson, a professor of psychology in Stanford's School of Humanities and Sciences about the frontiers of neuroeconomics, bridging psychology, economics, and neuroscience
Stanford professors elected to National Academy of Medicine
Wu Tsai Neuro affiliates Thomas Montine and Alice Ting are among those joining the distinguished society of physicians.
Rethinking Alzheimer's: How these tiny balls of fat factor in
Research from Knight Initiative Director Tony Wyss-Coray's lab show that an Alzheimer's hallmark—myriad oily droplets in brain cells called microglia—may help connect several of the disorder’s better known but not well understood features.
Eye prosthesis is the first to restore sight lost to macular degeneration
In a clinical trial of a wireless retinal prosthesis, Wu Tsai Neuro affiliate Daniel Palanker and colleagues found that people with advanced macular degeneration regained enough vision to read books and subway signs.
GenAI helps Stanford researchers better understand brain diseases
Synthetic brain MRI technology is supercharging computational neuroscience with massive data.
Rethinking Alzheimer's: Could it begin outside the brain?
Neurons are built to last, but with age, bad things can happen to them. Wu Tsai Neuro affiliate Katrin Andreasson's work shows a lot of it is triggered by what’s happening to immune cells outside of the brain.
When is the Brain Like a Subway Station? When It’s Processing Many Words at Once
A new study led by Wu Tsai Neuro Faculty Scholar Laura Gwilliams maps how we simultaneously process different words.
"Why Our Brains Need Friends: The Neuroscience of Social Connection"
In which we discuss how bad social isolation is for our brains with neuroscientist and author Ben Rein
‘A celebration’ of the gut and the brain
Organizers of the Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute’s 12th annual symposium share exciting new discoveries from the frontiers of the “gut-brain axis.”
Mom’s voice boosts language-center development in preemies’ brains, study finds
Premature babies who heard recordings of their mothers reading to them had more mature white matter in a key language area of the brain, Wu Tsai Neuro affiliate Heidi Feldman and colleagues found.
Rethinking Alzheimer's: Untangling the sticky truth about tau
Amyloid plaques have long been the focus of Alzheimer’s therapies. But Wu Tsai Neuro's Emmanuel Mignot and others are focusing on the stringy tangles of a protein called tau, the unsung second hallmark of Alzheimer’s.