Featured News Image Research news | Feb 19 2026 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Why the brain misunderstands speech after stroke In stroke patients with aphasia, the brain spends too little time processing ambiguous sounds, researchers find, suggesting new targets for precision therapies Image Wu Tsai Neuro News | Feb 18 2026 Stanford Report Three Wu Tsai Neuro scientists are named Sloan Research Fellows Faculty Scholar Guosong Hong and institute affiliates Christoph Thaiss and Steven Banik were among eight Stanford researchers to receive the honor Image Knight Initiative news | Feb 12 2026 Knight Initiative for Brain Resilience Preventing Parkinson’s, a new Alzheimer’s drug, and more featured at tenth Knigh... Researchers from around the world convened at Stanford to present their latest work on neurodegeneration and brain resilience Image Research news | Feb 2 2026 Knight Initiative for Brain Resilience Aging brains pile up damaged proteins Proteins that start life inside neurons build up faster in old age and spread to other brain cells—a potential source of neurological mischief News Filter & Sort Sort by ThemeNeuroDiscovery NeuroHealth NeuroEngineering News Type (-) Research news Sort by Newest to oldest Oldest to newest Image Research news | Aug 6 2021 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Brain’s navigation center calls on mental state as well as physical environment,... Lisa Giocomo and colleagues find that initial memory formation may involve both awareness of our location as well as what we were feeling when we were there. Image Research news | Jul 27 2021 Stanford Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence How Artificial Neural Networks Help Us Understand Neural Networks in the Human B... Researchers from Wu Tsai Neuro and Stanford HAI settle a seemingly intractable historical debate in neuroscience — opening a world of possibilities for using AI to study the brain. Image Research news | Jun 23 2021 Stanford Scope Neuroscientist’s book traverses the extremes of human behavior Stanford bioengineer and neuroscientist Karl Deisseroth, MD, PhD, is a pioneer in developing game-changing technologies that enable scientists to probe the brain's circuitry in a methodical search for the roots of behavior. Image Research news | Jun 21 2021 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Stanford study shows children recycle brain regions when acquiring new skills Stanford study shows children recycle brain regions when acquiring new skills Image Research news | Jun 11 2021 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Attractive and repulsive forces between two multitasking molecules help assemble... Two multifunctional cell surface molecules help direct neural network assembly in the developing mouse brain Image Research news | May 25 2021 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Stanford bioengineers develop algorithm to compare cells across species Researchers created an algorithm to identify similar cell types from species – including fish, mice, flatworms and sponges – that have diverged for hundreds of millions of years, which could help fill in gaps in our understanding of evolution. Image Research news | May 12 2021 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Software turns ‘mental handwriting’ into on-screen words, sentences Artificial intelligence, interpreting data from a device placed at the brain’s surface, enables people who are paralyzed or have severely impaired limb movement to communicate by text. Image Research news | Sep 28 2020 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Stanford scientists solve secret of nerve cells marking a form of schizophrenia A common genetic deletion boosts the risk for schizophrenia by 30-fold. Generating nerve cells from people with the deletion has showed Stanford researchers why. Image Research news | Jul 29 2019 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Key gene behind hallmark of Lou Gehrig’s disease identified Stanford researchers identified a gene crucial to the formation of toxic proteins in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and showed how it could inform potential therapies for the disease. Image Research news | Jul 18 2019 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Stanford team stimulates neurons to induce particular perceptions in mice's mind... Stanford scientists, using only direct brain stimulation, reproduced both the brain dynamics and the behavioral response of mice taught to discriminate between two different images. Image Research news | Jul 18 2019 Stanford Medicine - Scope Stanford team induces mice to see specific things that aren’t there The real question a new study suggests isn't why some people occasionally experience hallucinations: It's why all of us aren't hallucinating all the time. Image Research news | Jul 10 2019 Stanford Medicine - Scope Fish sleep like us, new research has found Researchers find that neural sleep patterns in fish are analogous to those in mammals, paving ways to develop sleep medication. Image Research news | Jul 10 2019 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Neural sleep patterns emerged at least 450 million years ago Researchers have found that brain patterns in sleeping zebrafish are similar to those of land vertebrates, suggesting that such sleep signatures developed before aquatic and land animals diverged. Image Research news | Jul 9 2019 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Discovery in mice points to potential treatment for vestibular disorders Researchers at Stanford have found a way to regenerate hair cells in the vestibular system of the mouse ear, with implications for treating dizziness. Image Research news | Jul 3 2019 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Immune cells invade aging brains, disrupt new nerve cell formation Stanford researchers have found intrusive immune cells in a place in the brains of humans and older mice where new nerve cells are born. The intruders appear to impair nerve cell generation. Image Research news | Jul 1 2019 Stanford Medicine - Scope Muting an inflammatory loudspeaker on immune cells shrinks acute stroke damage Selectively subduing a set of cells that migrate to the brain after a stroke occurs could meaningfully treat the stroke even days later. Pagination Previous page Page 3 Page 4 Current page 5 Page 6 Page 7 Next page
Image Research news | Feb 19 2026 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Why the brain misunderstands speech after stroke In stroke patients with aphasia, the brain spends too little time processing ambiguous sounds, researchers find, suggesting new targets for precision therapies
Image Wu Tsai Neuro News | Feb 18 2026 Stanford Report Three Wu Tsai Neuro scientists are named Sloan Research Fellows Faculty Scholar Guosong Hong and institute affiliates Christoph Thaiss and Steven Banik were among eight Stanford researchers to receive the honor
Image Knight Initiative news | Feb 12 2026 Knight Initiative for Brain Resilience Preventing Parkinson’s, a new Alzheimer’s drug, and more featured at tenth Knigh... Researchers from around the world convened at Stanford to present their latest work on neurodegeneration and brain resilience
Image Research news | Feb 2 2026 Knight Initiative for Brain Resilience Aging brains pile up damaged proteins Proteins that start life inside neurons build up faster in old age and spread to other brain cells—a potential source of neurological mischief
Image Research news | Aug 6 2021 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Brain’s navigation center calls on mental state as well as physical environment,... Lisa Giocomo and colleagues find that initial memory formation may involve both awareness of our location as well as what we were feeling when we were there.
Image Research news | Jul 27 2021 Stanford Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence How Artificial Neural Networks Help Us Understand Neural Networks in the Human B... Researchers from Wu Tsai Neuro and Stanford HAI settle a seemingly intractable historical debate in neuroscience — opening a world of possibilities for using AI to study the brain.
Image Research news | Jun 23 2021 Stanford Scope Neuroscientist’s book traverses the extremes of human behavior Stanford bioengineer and neuroscientist Karl Deisseroth, MD, PhD, is a pioneer in developing game-changing technologies that enable scientists to probe the brain's circuitry in a methodical search for the roots of behavior.
Image Research news | Jun 21 2021 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Stanford study shows children recycle brain regions when acquiring new skills Stanford study shows children recycle brain regions when acquiring new skills
Image Research news | Jun 11 2021 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Attractive and repulsive forces between two multitasking molecules help assemble... Two multifunctional cell surface molecules help direct neural network assembly in the developing mouse brain
Image Research news | May 25 2021 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Stanford bioengineers develop algorithm to compare cells across species Researchers created an algorithm to identify similar cell types from species – including fish, mice, flatworms and sponges – that have diverged for hundreds of millions of years, which could help fill in gaps in our understanding of evolution.
Image Research news | May 12 2021 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Software turns ‘mental handwriting’ into on-screen words, sentences Artificial intelligence, interpreting data from a device placed at the brain’s surface, enables people who are paralyzed or have severely impaired limb movement to communicate by text.
Image Research news | Sep 28 2020 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Stanford scientists solve secret of nerve cells marking a form of schizophrenia A common genetic deletion boosts the risk for schizophrenia by 30-fold. Generating nerve cells from people with the deletion has showed Stanford researchers why.
Image Research news | Jul 29 2019 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Key gene behind hallmark of Lou Gehrig’s disease identified Stanford researchers identified a gene crucial to the formation of toxic proteins in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and showed how it could inform potential therapies for the disease.
Image Research news | Jul 18 2019 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Stanford team stimulates neurons to induce particular perceptions in mice's mind... Stanford scientists, using only direct brain stimulation, reproduced both the brain dynamics and the behavioral response of mice taught to discriminate between two different images.
Image Research news | Jul 18 2019 Stanford Medicine - Scope Stanford team induces mice to see specific things that aren’t there The real question a new study suggests isn't why some people occasionally experience hallucinations: It's why all of us aren't hallucinating all the time.
Image Research news | Jul 10 2019 Stanford Medicine - Scope Fish sleep like us, new research has found Researchers find that neural sleep patterns in fish are analogous to those in mammals, paving ways to develop sleep medication.
Image Research news | Jul 10 2019 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Neural sleep patterns emerged at least 450 million years ago Researchers have found that brain patterns in sleeping zebrafish are similar to those of land vertebrates, suggesting that such sleep signatures developed before aquatic and land animals diverged.
Image Research news | Jul 9 2019 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Discovery in mice points to potential treatment for vestibular disorders Researchers at Stanford have found a way to regenerate hair cells in the vestibular system of the mouse ear, with implications for treating dizziness.
Image Research news | Jul 3 2019 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Immune cells invade aging brains, disrupt new nerve cell formation Stanford researchers have found intrusive immune cells in a place in the brains of humans and older mice where new nerve cells are born. The intruders appear to impair nerve cell generation.
Image Research news | Jul 1 2019 Stanford Medicine - Scope Muting an inflammatory loudspeaker on immune cells shrinks acute stroke damage Selectively subduing a set of cells that migrate to the brain after a stroke occurs could meaningfully treat the stroke even days later.