Displaying 1261 - 1280 news posts of 1425
Stanford football uses eye-tracking goggles to spot concussions
The Stanford football team’s Rose Bowl championship season might have ended differently without the help of technology that employs virtual reality goggles to quickly diagnose concussions. (Subscription required)
Leading a revolution in research: UCSF, Stanford build Bay Area brain trust
With two big neurosciences facilities in the works, the Bay Area’s premier medical campuses are seeking to lead a revolution in brain research that could herald new treatments for autism, Alzheimer’s and other maladies. (Subscription Required)
Risky Rats Give Clues on Brain Circuitry Behind Taking a Chance
When people make risky decisions, like doubling down in blackjack or investing in volatile stocks, what happens in the brain?
Scientists Can Now Watch the Brain Evaluate Risk
If the Stanford rats are any indicator, it’s a choice whose outcome can be predicted and controlled.
Scientists pinpoint brain circuit for risk preference in rats
When rats were trained to choose between high- and low-risk options while a circuit in their brains was monitored and manipulated, a specific signal in that circuit determined their choice.
The weirdness of boxes
In this Brain Game, Jason Silva and Dr. Allison Okamura show us how conflicting information can trick our senses into believing lies.
Controversial New Push to Tie Microbes to Alzheimer's Disease
A journal article says herpes virus and Lyme disease bacteria are behind the mind-robbing illness, but not all researchers are convinced
Pot legalization hasn’t done anything to shrink the racial gap in drug arrests
Marijuana legalization is often touted as a sure route to ending racial disparities in pot-related arrests. But a just-released study indicates that African Americans in legalization states continue to endure marijuana arrests at a higher rate than people
Sizing up living brain tissue
This year’s recipient of the CNS George A. Miller Prize, Wandell of Stanford University has recently turned his interests to reading and the developing brain. His latest work includes a longitudinal study of children aged 8 to 12 years old, in which he an
Stanford researchers out to conquer jet lag
Jet lag affects up to 95 percent of the millions of U.S. travelers who fly across time zones each year, generally leaving them fatigued, lacking in concentration and feeling unwell overall. Medical experts offer a list of strategies to minimize its sympto
Newfound brain pathway may let epilepsy patients steer around medical marijuana’s nasty side effects
Now, in a study published in Neuron, Stanford neuroscientist Ivan Soltesz, PhD, and his colleagues may have shown a way to enhance marijuana’s medical virtues by countering some of its troubling side effects.
In first human test of Optogenetics, doctors aim to restore sight to the blind
A breakthrough technology from neuroscience might allow blind people to see a monochromatic world.
Peter Kim, Scott Delp elected to National Academy of Engineering
Biochemist Peter Kim and bioengineer Scott Delp have been elected to the National Academy of Sciences. Kim is now one of only 20 people who are members of all three national academies.
How ‘mandatory abstinence’ can cut crime and save lives
Keith Humphreys is a professor of psychiatry and director of mental health policy at Stanford University.
Scientists zero in on brain’s sigh-control center
Sighing is a long, deep involuntary inhalation accompanying sensations of yearning, sadness, relief, boredom, exhaustion, or exasperation. Fewer of us know that the typical person also sighs spontaneously about every five minutes or so.
Study finds possible new jet-lag treatment: Exposure to flashing light
Short flashes of light at night are more effective than using continuous light as therapy to prevent disruptions in people’s circadian rhythms, according to researchers.
Stanford neurobiologist Carla Shatz on learning and the value of collaboration
As director of Stanford Bio-X, Carla Shatz, PhD, not only supports campus-wide interdisciplinary research efforts, but her own research serves as an example of how teams can work in collaboration.
Stanford announces new president: neuroscience pioneer Marc Tessier-Lavigne
Stanford University on Thursday named a neuroscientist with stellar research and biotech credentials to be its 11th president, underscoring the university's continued commitment to science.