Featured News Image Researcher profiles | Apr 27 2026 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Q&A: Could neuroscience help explain miscarriage? Pregnancy complications such as miscarriage spike after age 35. Wu Tsai Neuro postdoc Blake Laham suspects neural signaling in the uterus is partly to blame Image Researcher profiles | Apr 2 2026 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Q&A: ‘To see is to believe’ Faculty Scholar Guosong Hong says that light plays a key role in neuroscience and—and that’s why he’s working with a Big Ideas in Neuroscience team to make transparent brains Image Research news | Apr 1 2026 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Newly identified chronic pain circuit offers pathways to new treatments The research showed that chronic pain is controlled by an entirely separate system than acute pain 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 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 | Jun 11 2015 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Scientists find genetic underpinnings of functional brain networks seen in imagi... Imaging studies have delineated brain networks consisting of discrete brain regions acting in synchrony. This view of the brain’s functional architecture has now been confirmed by a study showing coordination at the genetic level as well. Image Research news | May 28 2015 Stanford Medicine - Scope Stanford researchers tie unexpected brain structures to creativity – and to stif... How often does the accountant turn out to be the life of the party? How often do the Nike sneakers, rather than the Armani suits, call the shots? Yet that may be the case when it comes to – of all things! – creativity. Image Research news | May 28 2015 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Researchers tie unexpected brain structures to creativity — and to stifling it A new study is the first to directly implicate the cerebellum in the creative process. As for the brain’s higher-level executive-control centers? Not so much. Image Research news | May 27 2015 The New York Times A Robot That Can Perform Brain Surgery on a Fruit Fly On a small darkened platform a handful of fruit flies wander aimlessly. There is a brief flash of light and a robotic arm darts downward, precisely targeting a fly’s thorax, a moving target roughly the size of a pinhead. Image Research news | May 26 2015 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute For big data to help patients, sharing health information is key, experts say A key message from Stanford’s annual big data conference was that realizing the potential of precision health means sharing massive amounts of medical and behavioral data. Image Research news | May 6 2015 Stanford Medicine - Scope Stanford panel: Big issues will loom when everyone has their genomic sequence on... Genetic Privacy: The Right (Not) to Know Image Research news | May 1 2015 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Cal-BRAIN grants boost neuroengineering projects Two Stanford University faculty members developing techniques for monitoring neurons as they fire signals throughout the brain got a boost in the first round of funding by California’s neuroscience research grants program, Cal-BRAIN. Image Research news | Apr 30 2015 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Scientists find way to monitor progress of stem cells after transplantation into... The ability to detect successful engraftment, integration and function of human cells implanted into the brain of a living animal could potentially speed stem-cell therapies’ path to clinical use. Image Research news | Apr 29 2015 Stanford Medicine - Scope Unmet expectations: Testifying before Congress on the opioid abuse epidemic My recent trip to Washington D.C. to speak before a congressional subcommittee on the problem of opioid misuse was all about unmet expectations. Image Research news | Apr 8 2015 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Study deciphers the noise in the human brain Electrical recordings directly from the human brain show remarkable precision in the coordination of widely distributed regions involved in memory recall, at rest and during sleep. Image Research news | Mar 17 2015 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Stanford neuroscientists find that noisy neurons are critical for learning A computer model of brain function helps explain a 20-year-old finding that the way a single noisy neuron fires in the brain can predict an animal's decisions. It turns out neurons without noise can't learn. The type of learning the group modeled reflects Image Research news | Feb 5 2015 Huff Post World Economic Forum Davos 2015 Wrap-Up: Get Ready for Breakthroughs About the Brain Interestingly, and on a cheerier note, one of the biggest themes programmed into the Davos agenda this January was a series of events on the new scientific developments about the brain. Image Research news | Feb 4 2015 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Different mental disorders cause same brain-matter loss, study finds A meta-analysis of 193 brain-imaging studies shows similar gray-matter loss in the brains of people with diagnoses as different as schizophrenia, depression and addiction. Image Research news | Feb 4 2015 Stanford Medicine - Scope Study: Major psychiatric disorders share common deficits in brain’s executive-fu... BY Bruce Goldman Image Research news | Feb 3 2015 Stanford News Unlocking the brain’s plasticity Depressing but true: people are less able to form new brain connections as they grow older. Undergraduate Richie Sapp was part of a team whose research could make it easier for adults to learn, and possibly heal after brain injuries. Image Research news | Feb 3 2015 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Study ties immune cells to delayed onset of post-stroke dementia Researchers say that the appearance in the brain of a type of immune cell has been implicated in delayed dementia in mice and humans who have suffered a stroke. Pagination First page Previous page Page 39 Page 40 Current page 41 Page 42 Page 43 Next page Last page
Image Researcher profiles | Apr 27 2026 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Q&A: Could neuroscience help explain miscarriage? Pregnancy complications such as miscarriage spike after age 35. Wu Tsai Neuro postdoc Blake Laham suspects neural signaling in the uterus is partly to blame
Image Researcher profiles | Apr 2 2026 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Q&A: ‘To see is to believe’ Faculty Scholar Guosong Hong says that light plays a key role in neuroscience and—and that’s why he’s working with a Big Ideas in Neuroscience team to make transparent brains
Image Research news | Apr 1 2026 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Newly identified chronic pain circuit offers pathways to new treatments The research showed that chronic pain is controlled by an entirely separate system than acute pain
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 Research news | Jun 11 2015 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Scientists find genetic underpinnings of functional brain networks seen in imagi... Imaging studies have delineated brain networks consisting of discrete brain regions acting in synchrony. This view of the brain’s functional architecture has now been confirmed by a study showing coordination at the genetic level as well.
Image Research news | May 28 2015 Stanford Medicine - Scope Stanford researchers tie unexpected brain structures to creativity – and to stif... How often does the accountant turn out to be the life of the party? How often do the Nike sneakers, rather than the Armani suits, call the shots? Yet that may be the case when it comes to – of all things! – creativity.
Image Research news | May 28 2015 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Researchers tie unexpected brain structures to creativity — and to stifling it A new study is the first to directly implicate the cerebellum in the creative process. As for the brain’s higher-level executive-control centers? Not so much.
Image Research news | May 27 2015 The New York Times A Robot That Can Perform Brain Surgery on a Fruit Fly On a small darkened platform a handful of fruit flies wander aimlessly. There is a brief flash of light and a robotic arm darts downward, precisely targeting a fly’s thorax, a moving target roughly the size of a pinhead.
Image Research news | May 26 2015 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute For big data to help patients, sharing health information is key, experts say A key message from Stanford’s annual big data conference was that realizing the potential of precision health means sharing massive amounts of medical and behavioral data.
Image Research news | May 6 2015 Stanford Medicine - Scope Stanford panel: Big issues will loom when everyone has their genomic sequence on... Genetic Privacy: The Right (Not) to Know
Image Research news | May 1 2015 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Cal-BRAIN grants boost neuroengineering projects Two Stanford University faculty members developing techniques for monitoring neurons as they fire signals throughout the brain got a boost in the first round of funding by California’s neuroscience research grants program, Cal-BRAIN.
Image Research news | Apr 30 2015 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Scientists find way to monitor progress of stem cells after transplantation into... The ability to detect successful engraftment, integration and function of human cells implanted into the brain of a living animal could potentially speed stem-cell therapies’ path to clinical use.
Image Research news | Apr 29 2015 Stanford Medicine - Scope Unmet expectations: Testifying before Congress on the opioid abuse epidemic My recent trip to Washington D.C. to speak before a congressional subcommittee on the problem of opioid misuse was all about unmet expectations.
Image Research news | Apr 8 2015 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Study deciphers the noise in the human brain Electrical recordings directly from the human brain show remarkable precision in the coordination of widely distributed regions involved in memory recall, at rest and during sleep.
Image Research news | Mar 17 2015 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Stanford neuroscientists find that noisy neurons are critical for learning A computer model of brain function helps explain a 20-year-old finding that the way a single noisy neuron fires in the brain can predict an animal's decisions. It turns out neurons without noise can't learn. The type of learning the group modeled reflects
Image Research news | Feb 5 2015 Huff Post World Economic Forum Davos 2015 Wrap-Up: Get Ready for Breakthroughs About the Brain Interestingly, and on a cheerier note, one of the biggest themes programmed into the Davos agenda this January was a series of events on the new scientific developments about the brain.
Image Research news | Feb 4 2015 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Different mental disorders cause same brain-matter loss, study finds A meta-analysis of 193 brain-imaging studies shows similar gray-matter loss in the brains of people with diagnoses as different as schizophrenia, depression and addiction.
Image Research news | Feb 4 2015 Stanford Medicine - Scope Study: Major psychiatric disorders share common deficits in brain’s executive-fu... BY Bruce Goldman
Image Research news | Feb 3 2015 Stanford News Unlocking the brain’s plasticity Depressing but true: people are less able to form new brain connections as they grow older. Undergraduate Richie Sapp was part of a team whose research could make it easier for adults to learn, and possibly heal after brain injuries.
Image Research news | Feb 3 2015 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Study ties immune cells to delayed onset of post-stroke dementia Researchers say that the appearance in the brain of a type of immune cell has been implicated in delayed dementia in mice and humans who have suffered a stroke.