Press coverage | Jul 10 2019 National Goegraphic These slumbering fish may offer clues to the origins of sleep Scientists who peered inside snoozing zebrafish have spotted some strikingly familiar patterns of activity. Press coverage | Jul 10 2019 Newsweek Sleep as humans experience it may have emerged 450 million years ago Scientists who studied a small, transparent fish believe the way humans sleep could have evolved 450 million years ago. Press coverage | Jul 10 2019 PBS Like us, fish experience the ‘dreaming’ stage of sleep Deep sleep and REM sleep could be universal among vertebrates, stretching 450 million years back in evolutionary time. Press coverage | Jul 8 2019 MIT Technology Review His probes could revolutionize brain treatments - Guosong Hong MIT Technology Review announced their '35 Innovators Under 35' list and Guosong Hong is on that list. Press coverage | Jul 6 2019 EurekAlert! Stanford researchers outline the role of a deep brain structure in concussion Concussion researchers have long suggested that damage to the corpus callosum, a thick bundle of nerves that connects the brain's two halves, could result in some common side effects of concussion, like dizziness or vision problems. The assumption is stra Awards and honors | Jul 2 2019 Whte House News President Donald J. Trump Announces Recipients of the Presidential Early Career ... Today, President Donald J. Trump announced the recipients of the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE). Press coverage | Jun 11 2019 The Washington Post Empathy is on the decline in this country. A new book describes what we can do t... Stanford neuroscientist Jamil Zaki’s new book, “The War for Kindness: Building empathy in a fractured world,” makes a powerful case for kindness and empathy — not only because they make the world a better place, but because they help us, too. Press coverage | May 31 2019 The New York Times ‘Screen Time’ is over The phrase can’t remotely capture our ever-shifting digital experience, social scientists say. Say hello to the “screenome.” Awards and honors | May 28 2019 CISION PRWeb Beckman Foundation Announces 2019 Beckman Young Investigator Awardees Ten Researchers Selected to Receive $6M in Total Science Funding for Cutting-edge Research Press coverage | May 23 2019 The Mercury News ‘Who am I?’ Former Stanford professor on the search for identity after a stroke A stroke in 2010 left former Stanford professor Debra Meyerson having to learn to walk again, while speech remains difficult. Press coverage | May 20 2019 npr How The Brain Shapes Pain And Links Ouch With Emotion For people, the link between pain and emotion is a good thing. But sometimes it can also be destructive, says Beth Darnall, a psychologist at Stanford University. Press coverage | May 14 2019 Scientific American Thwarting A Protein Reverses Brain Decline in Aged Mice Blocking an immune-related molecule lodged in blood vessels stops memory loss Press coverage | May 13 2019 STAT News By disabling a protein in the brain’s blood vessels, researchers ease age-relate... Scientists have shown that delivering blood from an old mouse into a young mouse or vice versa prompts a sort of “Freaky Friday” effect: The brains of the young mice exposed to the old blood lose vitality, while the young blood rejuvenates some brain func Press coverage | May 8 2019 The New York Times In This Doctor’s Office, a Physical Exam Like No Other Genetic and molecular analysis of 109 volunteers turned up hidden health problems in about half of them. Critics say the approach amounted to ‘carpet-bombing’ the body. Press coverage | May 3 2019 Futurism / The Bute Stanford Scientist Says In-Ear Gadgets Will Monitor Our Brains The ear is like a biological equivalent of a USB port. Press coverage | May 3 2019 Los Angeles Times Sleeping pills: A risk of car crashes, gunshot wounds and Jason Bourne amnesia Millions of Americans take millions of sleeping pills every year — a sign, many experts say, that human beings weren’t designed to live in a wired world of constant stimulation. Pagination Previous page Page 7 Page 8 Page 9 Page 10 Current page 11 Page 12 Page 13 Page 14 Page 15 Next page
Press coverage | Jul 10 2019 National Goegraphic These slumbering fish may offer clues to the origins of sleep Scientists who peered inside snoozing zebrafish have spotted some strikingly familiar patterns of activity.
Press coverage | Jul 10 2019 Newsweek Sleep as humans experience it may have emerged 450 million years ago Scientists who studied a small, transparent fish believe the way humans sleep could have evolved 450 million years ago.
Press coverage | Jul 10 2019 PBS Like us, fish experience the ‘dreaming’ stage of sleep Deep sleep and REM sleep could be universal among vertebrates, stretching 450 million years back in evolutionary time.
Press coverage | Jul 8 2019 MIT Technology Review His probes could revolutionize brain treatments - Guosong Hong MIT Technology Review announced their '35 Innovators Under 35' list and Guosong Hong is on that list.
Press coverage | Jul 6 2019 EurekAlert! Stanford researchers outline the role of a deep brain structure in concussion Concussion researchers have long suggested that damage to the corpus callosum, a thick bundle of nerves that connects the brain's two halves, could result in some common side effects of concussion, like dizziness or vision problems. The assumption is stra
Awards and honors | Jul 2 2019 Whte House News President Donald J. Trump Announces Recipients of the Presidential Early Career ... Today, President Donald J. Trump announced the recipients of the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE).
Press coverage | Jun 11 2019 The Washington Post Empathy is on the decline in this country. A new book describes what we can do t... Stanford neuroscientist Jamil Zaki’s new book, “The War for Kindness: Building empathy in a fractured world,” makes a powerful case for kindness and empathy — not only because they make the world a better place, but because they help us, too.
Press coverage | May 31 2019 The New York Times ‘Screen Time’ is over The phrase can’t remotely capture our ever-shifting digital experience, social scientists say. Say hello to the “screenome.”
Awards and honors | May 28 2019 CISION PRWeb Beckman Foundation Announces 2019 Beckman Young Investigator Awardees Ten Researchers Selected to Receive $6M in Total Science Funding for Cutting-edge Research
Press coverage | May 23 2019 The Mercury News ‘Who am I?’ Former Stanford professor on the search for identity after a stroke A stroke in 2010 left former Stanford professor Debra Meyerson having to learn to walk again, while speech remains difficult.
Press coverage | May 20 2019 npr How The Brain Shapes Pain And Links Ouch With Emotion For people, the link between pain and emotion is a good thing. But sometimes it can also be destructive, says Beth Darnall, a psychologist at Stanford University.
Press coverage | May 14 2019 Scientific American Thwarting A Protein Reverses Brain Decline in Aged Mice Blocking an immune-related molecule lodged in blood vessels stops memory loss
Press coverage | May 13 2019 STAT News By disabling a protein in the brain’s blood vessels, researchers ease age-relate... Scientists have shown that delivering blood from an old mouse into a young mouse or vice versa prompts a sort of “Freaky Friday” effect: The brains of the young mice exposed to the old blood lose vitality, while the young blood rejuvenates some brain func
Press coverage | May 8 2019 The New York Times In This Doctor’s Office, a Physical Exam Like No Other Genetic and molecular analysis of 109 volunteers turned up hidden health problems in about half of them. Critics say the approach amounted to ‘carpet-bombing’ the body.
Press coverage | May 3 2019 Futurism / The Bute Stanford Scientist Says In-Ear Gadgets Will Monitor Our Brains The ear is like a biological equivalent of a USB port.
Press coverage | May 3 2019 Los Angeles Times Sleeping pills: A risk of car crashes, gunshot wounds and Jason Bourne amnesia Millions of Americans take millions of sleeping pills every year — a sign, many experts say, that human beings weren’t designed to live in a wired world of constant stimulation.