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 Theme (-) NeuroDiscovery NeuroHealth NeuroEngineering News TypeResearch news Press coverage Wu Tsai Neuro News Podcast episodes Awards and honors Researcher profiles News Features Knight Initiative news Director's messages Sort by Newest to oldest Oldest to newest Image Research news | Aug 21 2017 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Pathways Carla Shatz, her breakthrough discovery in vision and the developing brain Image Research news | Aug 16 2017 Stanford Medicine - Scope Some post-surgery alternatives to opioids can reduce pain, study finds Researchers examined the most commonly used non-pharmaceutical pain management therapies following knee replacement surgery to see if they did indeed work to reduced pain while the patient was in the hospital. They found that acupuncture and electrotherap Image Research news | Aug 16 2017 Stanford Medicine - Scope Long-term, 3-D culture method lets slow-developing brain cells mature in a dish Stanford researchers have used a revolutionary 3-D culture technique to nurse a very slowly developing set of brain cells known as astrocytes to maturity in laboratory glassware. Image Research news | Aug 2 2017 Stanford Medicine - Scope Correcting a forebrain signaling imbalance reverses autistic symptoms in mice A new study, conducted by Stanford psychiatrist, neuroscientist and inventor Karl Deisseroth, MD, PhD, and colleagues, suggests that key features of autism reflect an imbalance in signaling from two kinds of neurons in a portion of the forebrain. Image Research news | Aug 2 2017 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Autism may reflect excitation-inhibition imbalance in brain Stanford researchers used advanced lab technologies to show, in mice, that symptoms of autism can be countered by reducing the ratio of excitatory to inhibitory neuronal firing in the forebrain. Image Research news | Jul 27 2017 Stanford Medicine - Scope The mouse that didn’t roar: Dormitory housing defuses hardwired male territorial... Male mice are naturally territorial. In the wild or in the lab, they attack other male mice even if plenty of room, food and females are available. This behavior is under the control of a small nerve circuit in the male mouse’s brain; disabling the circui Image Research news | Jul 27 2017 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Social influences can override aggression in male mice, study shows A tiny set of nerve cells in a male mouse’s brain activates aggression. But a new Stanford study shows that the male’s susceptibility to this activation depends on whether it has been housed with other mice or in isolation. Image Press coverage | Jul 21 2017 Blooberg View Neuroscience Offers Insights Into the Opioid Epidemic Addiction changes the brain in lasting ways, and some brains are more vulnerable than others. Image Research news | Jun 22 2017 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Stanford researchers say U.S. policies on drugs and addiction could use a dose o... Legal and illegal drugs are killing more people than AIDS ever did, yet the nation’s drug policies are based on unproven assumptions about addiction. Neuroscience could help shape more effective policies and save lives. Image Research news | Jun 22 2017 Stanford Medicine - Scope Addiction policies should accord with neuroscience, Stanford researchers argue Addiction, like riding a bike, is a learned behavioral pattern you don’t unlearn even if you haven’t performed it for decades. Your brain’s semi-permanently hot-wired reward system has to be stripped down, reordered, and re-insulated again. Image Research news | Apr 26 2017 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Scientists assemble working human forebrain circuits in a lab dish Stanford investigators fused two stem-cell-derived neural spheroids, each containing a different type of human neuron, then watched as one set of neurons migrated and hooked up with the other set. Image Research news | Apr 6 2017 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Brain’s navigation more complex than previously thought Neuroscientists’ discovery of grid cells, popularly known as the brain’s GPS, was hailed as a major discovery. But new Stanford research suggest the system is more complicated than anyone had guessed. Image Research news | Mar 23 2017 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Stanford scientists find a previously unknown role for the cerebellum Researchers long believed that the cerebellum did little more than process our senses and control our muscles. New techniques to study the most densely packed neurons in our brains reveal that it may do much more. Image Wu Tsai Neuro News | Feb 8 2017 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Stanford neuroscientists take their Big Ideas on decision-making, neurotechnolog... The Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute is elevating three research programs to become the flagship Big Ideas collaborations focusing on brain rejuvenation, neurotechnology and decision-making. Image Research news | Jan 18 2017 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Toxic brain cells may drive many neurodegenerative disorders, Stanford-led study... Astrocytes, the brain’s most abundant cells, are essential to the survival and healthy function of nerve cells. But aberrant astrocytes may be driving brain disorders. Image Research news | Dec 15 2016 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Research locates absence epilepsy seizure ‘choke point’ in brain Stanford researchers used a rodent model to discover that shifting the firing pattern of a particular set of brain cells is all it takes to initiate, or to terminate, an absence seizure. Pagination Previous page Page 18 Page 19 Page 20 Current page 21 Page 22 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 21 2017 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Pathways Carla Shatz, her breakthrough discovery in vision and the developing brain
Image Research news | Aug 16 2017 Stanford Medicine - Scope Some post-surgery alternatives to opioids can reduce pain, study finds Researchers examined the most commonly used non-pharmaceutical pain management therapies following knee replacement surgery to see if they did indeed work to reduced pain while the patient was in the hospital. They found that acupuncture and electrotherap
Image Research news | Aug 16 2017 Stanford Medicine - Scope Long-term, 3-D culture method lets slow-developing brain cells mature in a dish Stanford researchers have used a revolutionary 3-D culture technique to nurse a very slowly developing set of brain cells known as astrocytes to maturity in laboratory glassware.
Image Research news | Aug 2 2017 Stanford Medicine - Scope Correcting a forebrain signaling imbalance reverses autistic symptoms in mice A new study, conducted by Stanford psychiatrist, neuroscientist and inventor Karl Deisseroth, MD, PhD, and colleagues, suggests that key features of autism reflect an imbalance in signaling from two kinds of neurons in a portion of the forebrain.
Image Research news | Aug 2 2017 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Autism may reflect excitation-inhibition imbalance in brain Stanford researchers used advanced lab technologies to show, in mice, that symptoms of autism can be countered by reducing the ratio of excitatory to inhibitory neuronal firing in the forebrain.
Image Research news | Jul 27 2017 Stanford Medicine - Scope The mouse that didn’t roar: Dormitory housing defuses hardwired male territorial... Male mice are naturally territorial. In the wild or in the lab, they attack other male mice even if plenty of room, food and females are available. This behavior is under the control of a small nerve circuit in the male mouse’s brain; disabling the circui
Image Research news | Jul 27 2017 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Social influences can override aggression in male mice, study shows A tiny set of nerve cells in a male mouse’s brain activates aggression. But a new Stanford study shows that the male’s susceptibility to this activation depends on whether it has been housed with other mice or in isolation.
Image Press coverage | Jul 21 2017 Blooberg View Neuroscience Offers Insights Into the Opioid Epidemic Addiction changes the brain in lasting ways, and some brains are more vulnerable than others.
Image Research news | Jun 22 2017 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Stanford researchers say U.S. policies on drugs and addiction could use a dose o... Legal and illegal drugs are killing more people than AIDS ever did, yet the nation’s drug policies are based on unproven assumptions about addiction. Neuroscience could help shape more effective policies and save lives.
Image Research news | Jun 22 2017 Stanford Medicine - Scope Addiction policies should accord with neuroscience, Stanford researchers argue Addiction, like riding a bike, is a learned behavioral pattern you don’t unlearn even if you haven’t performed it for decades. Your brain’s semi-permanently hot-wired reward system has to be stripped down, reordered, and re-insulated again.
Image Research news | Apr 26 2017 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Scientists assemble working human forebrain circuits in a lab dish Stanford investigators fused two stem-cell-derived neural spheroids, each containing a different type of human neuron, then watched as one set of neurons migrated and hooked up with the other set.
Image Research news | Apr 6 2017 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Brain’s navigation more complex than previously thought Neuroscientists’ discovery of grid cells, popularly known as the brain’s GPS, was hailed as a major discovery. But new Stanford research suggest the system is more complicated than anyone had guessed.
Image Research news | Mar 23 2017 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Stanford scientists find a previously unknown role for the cerebellum Researchers long believed that the cerebellum did little more than process our senses and control our muscles. New techniques to study the most densely packed neurons in our brains reveal that it may do much more.
Image Wu Tsai Neuro News | Feb 8 2017 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Stanford neuroscientists take their Big Ideas on decision-making, neurotechnolog... The Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute is elevating three research programs to become the flagship Big Ideas collaborations focusing on brain rejuvenation, neurotechnology and decision-making.
Image Research news | Jan 18 2017 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Toxic brain cells may drive many neurodegenerative disorders, Stanford-led study... Astrocytes, the brain’s most abundant cells, are essential to the survival and healthy function of nerve cells. But aberrant astrocytes may be driving brain disorders.
Image Research news | Dec 15 2016 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Research locates absence epilepsy seizure ‘choke point’ in brain Stanford researchers used a rodent model to discover that shifting the firing pattern of a particular set of brain cells is all it takes to initiate, or to terminate, an absence seizure.