Featured News Image Knight Initiative news | Mar 23 2026 Knight Initiative for Brain Resilience New ideas in aging and resilience research launched by Rosenkranz Foundation and... The Rosenkranz Aging and Rejuvenation Seed Grant Program announced eight innovative new research projects with additional support from the Knight Initiative for Brain Resilience Image Wu Tsai Neuro News | Mar 23 2026 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Announcing the 2026 Neurosciences Postdoctoral Scholars Ten innovative postdoctoral scholars will pursue creative approaches to advance neuroscience and brain resilience research Image Research news | Mar 19 2026 Knight Initiative for Brain Resilience Study of pythons’ extreme diet reveals new hunger-curbing molecule The snakes’ unique feeding behavior offers new clues about the gut-brain axis—and hints of a potential weight-loss drug with fewer side effects than GLP-1 drugs Image Research news | Mar 12 2026 Knight Initiative for Brain Resilience Watching a lifetime in motion reveals the architecture of aging Knight Initiative scientists tracked every moment of the life of the African turquoise killifish, showing that behavior alone can forecast whether an animal will live a long or short life News Filter & Sort Sort by ThemeNeuroDiscovery NeuroHealth NeuroEngineering News Type (-) Research news Researcher profiles Awards and honors Press coverage Wu Tsai Neuro News Sort by Newest to oldest Oldest to newest Image Research news | Aug 20 2018 Stanford Medicine - Scope To help patients quash pain, researcher develops practical guide for health care... In a new book, Stanford pain psychologist Beth Darnall offers practical tools for health care providers to help their patients reduce pain. Image Research news | Aug 8 2018 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Scientists tie specific brain circuit to sociability in mice Autism spectrum disorder is marked by severe social deficits. Stanford researchers were able to reverse those types of deficits in mice by activating a single brain circuit. Image Research news | Aug 8 2018 Stanford Medicine - Scope Reaching for new stroke treatments by understanding proprioception Stanford mechanical engineering PhD student Sean Sketch is working to better understand proprioception — in the hope of one day helping people for whom sense has been impaired by stroke or other diseases. Image Research news | Aug 8 2018 Stanford Medicine - Scope On/off sociability switch in brain identified, could play a role in autism The release of a single signaling chemical from a specific nerve-cell tract in a particular part of the brain, like an on/off switch, may spell the difference between sociability and social awkwardness. Image Research news | Aug 7 2018 Stanford Medicine - Scope A nanoparticle opens new windows into neuroscience and biology Neurons in the brain and body send chemical signals from one to the next. Now, scientists led by Stanford's Steven Chu are a step closer to watching those signals take shape inside individual neurons. Image Research news | Aug 1 2018 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute 5 Questions: Robert Fisher on deep-brain stimulation for drug-resistant epilepsy The FDA has approved the use of an implanted device that releases periodic electrical discharges in the brain to counteract seizures in people with epilepsy. In an interview, neurologist Robert Fisher described the technology and Stanford’s role in testin Image Research news | Jul 30 2018 Stanford Medicine - Scope “Mood mirror” in blood: Might its absence bring on the blues? Stanford psychiatric researcher Natalie Rasgon, MD, PhD, and her collaborators in a multicenter study have identified a substance, acetyl-L-choline, whose levels in the blood of people suffering from depression are correspondingly depressed. Image Research news | Jul 30 2018 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Study links depression to low blood levels of acetyl-L-carnitine Investigators at Stanford and elsewhere have shown, for the first time in humans, that low blood levels of acetyl-L-carnitine track with the severity and duration of depression. Image Research news | Jul 25 2018 Stanford Medicine - Scope How you get around depends on how fast you’re moving Stanford neuroscientist Lisa Giocomo, PhD, and her colleagues examined the navigational behavior and brain-activity patterns of mice traveling through a virtual reality environment. Image Research news | Jul 20 2018 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Virtual athletes compete to take on a medical challenge ŁUKASZ KIDZIŃSKI, a postdoctoral scholar in bioengineering at Stanford, cooked up a contest with a serious goal: designing better prosthetic limbs and helping patients adapt to them. Image Research news | Jul 11 2018 Stanford Medicine - Scope What happens when you take a bunch of medications? A new algorithm could help do... Researchers Marinka Zitnik, PhD; Monica Agrawal; and Jure Leskovec, PhD, have designed a new system to deal with the literally billions of possibilities when considering any two drugs — out of about 5,000 on the U.S. market — and one of around a thousand Image Research news | Jul 11 2018 Stanford Medicine - Scope Virtual athletes compete to take on a medical challenge Lukasz Kidziński hit on the idea of a competition, in which teams from around the world would compete to design artificial intelligence algorithms that would, along with virtual bodies informed by Scott Delp’s data and models, learn to walk, run and event Image Research news | Jul 10 2018 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Artificial intelligence helps Stanford computer scientists predict the side effe... Millions of people take upwards of five medications a day, but testing the side effects of such combinations is impractical. Now, Stanford computer scientists have figured out how to predict side effects using artificial intelligence. Image Research news | Jul 5 2018 Stanford Medicine - Scope How a Stanford neurobiologist thinks about his faith By Nathan Collins Image Research news | Jul 5 2018 Stanford Medicine - Scope The beating brain: A video captures the organ’s rhythmic pulsations Your brain doesn't just sits still inside your skull, it rhythmically bulges and shrinks with each heartbeat, by an amount equivalent to a bit less the width of a human hair. Image Research news | Jul 2 2018 Stanford Medicine - News Learning through sound The audible world contains vast amounts of information about the world around us. Scholars from across Stanford are exploring this invisible landscape as a research tool and as a way of understanding each other. Pagination Previous page Page 24 Page 25 Current page 26 Page 27 Page 28 Next page
Image Knight Initiative news | Mar 23 2026 Knight Initiative for Brain Resilience New ideas in aging and resilience research launched by Rosenkranz Foundation and... The Rosenkranz Aging and Rejuvenation Seed Grant Program announced eight innovative new research projects with additional support from the Knight Initiative for Brain Resilience
Image Wu Tsai Neuro News | Mar 23 2026 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Announcing the 2026 Neurosciences Postdoctoral Scholars Ten innovative postdoctoral scholars will pursue creative approaches to advance neuroscience and brain resilience research
Image Research news | Mar 19 2026 Knight Initiative for Brain Resilience Study of pythons’ extreme diet reveals new hunger-curbing molecule The snakes’ unique feeding behavior offers new clues about the gut-brain axis—and hints of a potential weight-loss drug with fewer side effects than GLP-1 drugs
Image Research news | Mar 12 2026 Knight Initiative for Brain Resilience Watching a lifetime in motion reveals the architecture of aging Knight Initiative scientists tracked every moment of the life of the African turquoise killifish, showing that behavior alone can forecast whether an animal will live a long or short life
Image Research news | Aug 20 2018 Stanford Medicine - Scope To help patients quash pain, researcher develops practical guide for health care... In a new book, Stanford pain psychologist Beth Darnall offers practical tools for health care providers to help their patients reduce pain.
Image Research news | Aug 8 2018 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Scientists tie specific brain circuit to sociability in mice Autism spectrum disorder is marked by severe social deficits. Stanford researchers were able to reverse those types of deficits in mice by activating a single brain circuit.
Image Research news | Aug 8 2018 Stanford Medicine - Scope Reaching for new stroke treatments by understanding proprioception Stanford mechanical engineering PhD student Sean Sketch is working to better understand proprioception — in the hope of one day helping people for whom sense has been impaired by stroke or other diseases.
Image Research news | Aug 8 2018 Stanford Medicine - Scope On/off sociability switch in brain identified, could play a role in autism The release of a single signaling chemical from a specific nerve-cell tract in a particular part of the brain, like an on/off switch, may spell the difference between sociability and social awkwardness.
Image Research news | Aug 7 2018 Stanford Medicine - Scope A nanoparticle opens new windows into neuroscience and biology Neurons in the brain and body send chemical signals from one to the next. Now, scientists led by Stanford's Steven Chu are a step closer to watching those signals take shape inside individual neurons.
Image Research news | Aug 1 2018 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute 5 Questions: Robert Fisher on deep-brain stimulation for drug-resistant epilepsy The FDA has approved the use of an implanted device that releases periodic electrical discharges in the brain to counteract seizures in people with epilepsy. In an interview, neurologist Robert Fisher described the technology and Stanford’s role in testin
Image Research news | Jul 30 2018 Stanford Medicine - Scope “Mood mirror” in blood: Might its absence bring on the blues? Stanford psychiatric researcher Natalie Rasgon, MD, PhD, and her collaborators in a multicenter study have identified a substance, acetyl-L-choline, whose levels in the blood of people suffering from depression are correspondingly depressed.
Image Research news | Jul 30 2018 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Study links depression to low blood levels of acetyl-L-carnitine Investigators at Stanford and elsewhere have shown, for the first time in humans, that low blood levels of acetyl-L-carnitine track with the severity and duration of depression.
Image Research news | Jul 25 2018 Stanford Medicine - Scope How you get around depends on how fast you’re moving Stanford neuroscientist Lisa Giocomo, PhD, and her colleagues examined the navigational behavior and brain-activity patterns of mice traveling through a virtual reality environment.
Image Research news | Jul 20 2018 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Virtual athletes compete to take on a medical challenge ŁUKASZ KIDZIŃSKI, a postdoctoral scholar in bioengineering at Stanford, cooked up a contest with a serious goal: designing better prosthetic limbs and helping patients adapt to them.
Image Research news | Jul 11 2018 Stanford Medicine - Scope What happens when you take a bunch of medications? A new algorithm could help do... Researchers Marinka Zitnik, PhD; Monica Agrawal; and Jure Leskovec, PhD, have designed a new system to deal with the literally billions of possibilities when considering any two drugs — out of about 5,000 on the U.S. market — and one of around a thousand
Image Research news | Jul 11 2018 Stanford Medicine - Scope Virtual athletes compete to take on a medical challenge Lukasz Kidziński hit on the idea of a competition, in which teams from around the world would compete to design artificial intelligence algorithms that would, along with virtual bodies informed by Scott Delp’s data and models, learn to walk, run and event
Image Research news | Jul 10 2018 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Artificial intelligence helps Stanford computer scientists predict the side effe... Millions of people take upwards of five medications a day, but testing the side effects of such combinations is impractical. Now, Stanford computer scientists have figured out how to predict side effects using artificial intelligence.
Image Research news | Jul 5 2018 Stanford Medicine - Scope How a Stanford neurobiologist thinks about his faith By Nathan Collins
Image Research news | Jul 5 2018 Stanford Medicine - Scope The beating brain: A video captures the organ’s rhythmic pulsations Your brain doesn't just sits still inside your skull, it rhythmically bulges and shrinks with each heartbeat, by an amount equivalent to a bit less the width of a human hair.
Image Research news | Jul 2 2018 Stanford Medicine - News Learning through sound The audible world contains vast amounts of information about the world around us. Scholars from across Stanford are exploring this invisible landscape as a research tool and as a way of understanding each other.