Displaying 621 - 640 news posts of 1425
This Stanford scientist can make you feel and think younger: interview with Dr. Laura Carstensen
So 9/11, SARS epidemic, we're probably seeing the same thing now with COVID. In the United States where we see these age differences shift, when people in the population become aware that time is not unlimited, that mortality places a limit on how much ti
How power erodes empathy, and the steps we can take to rebuild it
The more powerful people are, the less likely they are to have empathy because they're less likely to need other people.
Todd Coleman Joins the Stanford Bioengineering Department
Todd Coleman has joined Wu Tsai Neuro as our newest Institute Scholar. His home department, Stanford Bioengineering, asked him a to share a few stories about himself and his interests.
National Institute on Aging awards $15 million to Stanford’s Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center
The Stanford-based center’s affiliated faculty and staff, aided by more than 400 volunteers, conduct research on Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases and related disorders.
AI predicts effective depression treatment based on brainwave patterns
Tracking brainwave patterns and symptoms in patients with depression, researchers used artificial intelligence to predict best treatment options.
Calls for racial justice gained steam with empathy
Jamil Zaki
For 25 days, protesters around the world have marched to demand racial justice, sparked by the death of George Floyd at the hands of police. Anti-black violence is not new, nor are protests against it, but this time the movement caught fire.
Stanford researchers develop artificial synapse that works with living cells
Researchers have created a device that can integrate and interact with neuron-like cells. This could be an early step toward an artificial synapse for use in brain-computer interfaces.
Chan Zuckerberg Initiative awards $1.49 million to Stanford researchers
The Chan Zuckerberg Initiative has awarded $1.49 million to research projects involving Stanford Medicine scientists who will investigate emerging ideas about the role of inflammation in disease.
Marc Tessier-Lavigne receives Gruber Neuroscience Prize
Tessier-Lavigne shares the prize with two other neuroscientists. They are being recognized for discoveries revealing the molecular mechanisms that guide axon development in neural circuits.
Scientists engineer one protein to fight cancer and regenerate neurons
By making two different alterations to a single messenger protein, researchers induced the body’s biochemical control system to target two very different conditions.
Democratizing access to resources for Stanford researchers
Stanford Vice Provost and Dean of Research Kathryn Moler wants all research resources to be as readily available as books in a library. This model would enable faculty and students to pursue the most innovative research in flexible, collaborative teams.
Stanford psychologists investigate why some older adults remember better than others
This work marks the beginning of an effort to better understand memory and memory loss in older adults using advanced imaging and data analysis techniques.
Karl Deisseroth wins 2020 Heineken Prize for Medicine
Karl Deisseroth was awarded the prize for developing optogenetics, which enables remote manipulation of nerve cells using light, and hydrogel-tissue chemistry, which lets light and molecular probes travel through biological tissue
Stanford researchers show how decisions light up the brain
Engineers and biomedical experts have developed a new technique to help scientists better understand how our brains work and aid in the development of new drugs.
Announcing 2020 SIGFs Affiliated with the Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute
Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute partners with the Vice Provost for Graduate Education to award Stanford Interdisciplinary Graduate Fellowships (SIGFs) in the area of neuroscience.
Brain imaging for stroke patients dropped off during COVID-19 height
In U.S. hospitals, the frequency of brain imaging for acute stroke patients dipped, suggesting hesitancy to seek medical care for non-COVID-19 conditions.
ChEM-H researchers uncover role of membrane sugars in flu infection
ChEM-H graduate students reveal how the forest of sugars on a cell’s surface could help in the defense against flu infection.
Complex data workflows contribute to reproducibility crisis in science, Stanford scientists say
Markedly different conclusions about brain scans reached by 70 independent teams highlight the challenges to data analysis in the modern era of mammoth datasets and highly flexible processing workflows.