Featured News Image news | May 2 2024 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Psychedelics, placebo, and anesthetic dreams This week on From Our Neurons to Yours, we talk with anesthesiologist Boris Heifets about studies that could change our understanding of the renaissance in psychedelic medicine Image news | Apr 15 2024 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Neuroscience sheds light on childhood gut disorders The recent discovery that intestinal neurons normally self-organize into a striped pattern around the time of birth could help explain wide-ranging GI disorders in children, say Wu Tsai Neuro Faculty Scholar Julia Kaltschmidt and her team News Filter & Sort Sort by ThemeNeuroDiscovery NeuroHealth NeuroEngineering News TypeResearch news Press coverage Awards and honors Featured News Institute News Knight Initiative news Researcher profiles Podcast episodes Publications Director's messages Sort by Newest to oldest Oldest to newest Image news | Oct 30 2017 The Dish Andrea Goldsmith wins award for mentoring women in engineering Goldsmith received the 2017 Women in Communications Engineering (WICE) Mentorship Award from the IEEE Communications Society in recognition of her efforts to bring diversity to her field and opportunity to her students. news | Oct 27 2017 Stanford Medicine - Scope More-frequent pot smoking found to correlate with more frequent sexual intercour... The jury’s still out on rock ’n’ roll. But the link between sex and at least one drug, marijuana, has been confirmed. Image news | Oct 27 2017 Stanford Medicine - News Center Regular marijuana use linked to more sex The first study to examine the relationship between marijuana use and frequency of sexual intercourse at the population level in the United States shows a positive correlation between the two. news | Oct 24 2017 The Atlantic The Narcoleptic Dogs That Changed the Science of Sleep It's taken more than 20 years to get to the bottom of narcolepsy—and there's still no cure. Image news | Oct 24 2017 Stanford Medicine - Scope Stanford’s longevity center celebrates ten years We need to collaborate on issues surrounding aging — not just physical health, but also cognitive health and financial security — and that they needed to figure out how to take advantage of the opportunities that longer lives presented. Image news | Oct 19 2017 Stanford Medicine - News Center Should researchers seek to enhance the brain? As scientists get better at interpreting the language of the brain, they get closer to not just treating disease, but also enhancing our senses and our intellects. Should they go there? news | Oct 19 2017 Stanford Medicine - Scope Melding brain and machine: A tale of neuroscience, technology and ethics People have been imagining what would happen if we stuck computers in our brains for a surprisingly long time — since at least 1879 in fact, when Edward Page Mitchell first published “The Ablest Man in the World”. Image news | Oct 19 2017 Stanford News Stanford celebrates 10 years of driving the discussion on longevity In its first 10 years, the Stanford Center on Longevity helped expand discussion of the world’s aging population, making that discussion both more inclusive and more optimistic. Pagination Previous page Page 102 Page 103 Current page 104 Page 105 Page 106 Next page
Image news | May 2 2024 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Psychedelics, placebo, and anesthetic dreams This week on From Our Neurons to Yours, we talk with anesthesiologist Boris Heifets about studies that could change our understanding of the renaissance in psychedelic medicine
Image news | Apr 15 2024 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Neuroscience sheds light on childhood gut disorders The recent discovery that intestinal neurons normally self-organize into a striped pattern around the time of birth could help explain wide-ranging GI disorders in children, say Wu Tsai Neuro Faculty Scholar Julia Kaltschmidt and her team
Image news | Oct 30 2017 The Dish Andrea Goldsmith wins award for mentoring women in engineering Goldsmith received the 2017 Women in Communications Engineering (WICE) Mentorship Award from the IEEE Communications Society in recognition of her efforts to bring diversity to her field and opportunity to her students.
news | Oct 27 2017 Stanford Medicine - Scope More-frequent pot smoking found to correlate with more frequent sexual intercour... The jury’s still out on rock ’n’ roll. But the link between sex and at least one drug, marijuana, has been confirmed.
Image news | Oct 27 2017 Stanford Medicine - News Center Regular marijuana use linked to more sex The first study to examine the relationship between marijuana use and frequency of sexual intercourse at the population level in the United States shows a positive correlation between the two.
news | Oct 24 2017 The Atlantic The Narcoleptic Dogs That Changed the Science of Sleep It's taken more than 20 years to get to the bottom of narcolepsy—and there's still no cure.
Image news | Oct 24 2017 Stanford Medicine - Scope Stanford’s longevity center celebrates ten years We need to collaborate on issues surrounding aging — not just physical health, but also cognitive health and financial security — and that they needed to figure out how to take advantage of the opportunities that longer lives presented.
Image news | Oct 19 2017 Stanford Medicine - News Center Should researchers seek to enhance the brain? As scientists get better at interpreting the language of the brain, they get closer to not just treating disease, but also enhancing our senses and our intellects. Should they go there?
news | Oct 19 2017 Stanford Medicine - Scope Melding brain and machine: A tale of neuroscience, technology and ethics People have been imagining what would happen if we stuck computers in our brains for a surprisingly long time — since at least 1879 in fact, when Edward Page Mitchell first published “The Ablest Man in the World”.
Image news | Oct 19 2017 Stanford News Stanford celebrates 10 years of driving the discussion on longevity In its first 10 years, the Stanford Center on Longevity helped expand discussion of the world’s aging population, making that discussion both more inclusive and more optimistic.