Featured News Image Researcher profiles | Mar 9 2026 Knight Initiative for Brain Resilience Q&A: Probing electrical signals to understand Alzheimer’s disease Brain Resilience Postdoctoral Scholar Annie Goettemoeller is studying how epilepsy-like activity might drive the spread of Alzheimer’s pathology in the brain Image Research news | Feb 23 2026 Knight Initiative for Brain Resilience Engineered immune therapy could help fight brain aging Neuroscientists studying inflammation and age-related brain decline engineered a protein that spurs the growth of new neurons in aging mice 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 News Filter & Sort Sort by ThemeNeuroDiscovery NeuroEngineering News TypeResearch news Researcher profiles Sort by Newest to oldest Oldest to newest Image Research news | Dec 13 2023 UCSF Neurosurgery The intricate machinery of human speech In a first-of-its-kind study, faculty scholar Laura Gwilliams and colleagues at UCSF give us an unprecedented view into how the brain analyzes the sounds in words Image Researcher profiles | Dec 13 2023 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Q&A: On the frontiers of speech science Wu Tsai Neuro’s newest faculty scholar, Laura Gwilliams, discusses advances in the science of how we understand one another. Image Research news | Aug 23 2023 Stanford Medicine Brain implants, software guide speech-disabled person’s intended words to comput... Our brains remember how to formulate words even if the muscles responsible for saying them out loud are incapacitated. A brain-computer hookup is making the dream of restoring speech a reality in a Stanford Medicine study, which includes Wu Tsai Neuro aff Image Research news | Dec 10 2019 Stanford Medicine - Scope Why we talk with our hands — and how that may help give speech to the speechless By Bruce Goldman
Image Researcher profiles | Mar 9 2026 Knight Initiative for Brain Resilience Q&A: Probing electrical signals to understand Alzheimer’s disease Brain Resilience Postdoctoral Scholar Annie Goettemoeller is studying how epilepsy-like activity might drive the spread of Alzheimer’s pathology in the brain
Image Research news | Feb 23 2026 Knight Initiative for Brain Resilience Engineered immune therapy could help fight brain aging Neuroscientists studying inflammation and age-related brain decline engineered a protein that spurs the growth of new neurons in aging mice
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 Research news | Dec 13 2023 UCSF Neurosurgery The intricate machinery of human speech In a first-of-its-kind study, faculty scholar Laura Gwilliams and colleagues at UCSF give us an unprecedented view into how the brain analyzes the sounds in words
Image Researcher profiles | Dec 13 2023 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Q&A: On the frontiers of speech science Wu Tsai Neuro’s newest faculty scholar, Laura Gwilliams, discusses advances in the science of how we understand one another.
Image Research news | Aug 23 2023 Stanford Medicine Brain implants, software guide speech-disabled person’s intended words to comput... Our brains remember how to formulate words even if the muscles responsible for saying them out loud are incapacitated. A brain-computer hookup is making the dream of restoring speech a reality in a Stanford Medicine study, which includes Wu Tsai Neuro aff
Image Research news | Dec 10 2019 Stanford Medicine - Scope Why we talk with our hands — and how that may help give speech to the speechless By Bruce Goldman