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 | Aug 21 2017 Stanford Medicine Magazine Pathways Carla Shatz, her breakthrough discovery in vision and the developing brain 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. 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 news | Aug 10 2017 Stanford Medicine - Scope Open contest with skeleton videos may help people learn, or relearn, to walk If you’re a scientist who wants to do something to help kids with cerebral palsy, your first strategy probably isn’t to launch an internet contest with freaky skeleton videos, but that is more or less what Łukasz Kidziński, PhD, did. Image news | Aug 8 2017 Stanford Engineering Does autism reflect an excitation-inhibition imbalance in the brain? A Stanford study suggests that aspects of autism reflect a signaling imbalance in certain neurons in the forebrain. Could reversing this imbalance alleviate some symptoms? Image news | Aug 7 2017 Stanford News Stanford bioengineers encourage virtual competitors to vie for a different kind ... Better models of the bone, muscles and nerves that control our bodies could help doctors manage movement disorders like cerebral palsy. A new competition is crowdsourcing the search for those tools. Image news | Aug 7 2017 Stanford Medicine - News Center Jennifer Cochran appointed chair of bioengineering Jennifer Cochran, whose research focuses on development of new technologies for high-throughput protein analysis and engineering, succeeds Norbert Pelc. 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. Pagination Previous page Page 107 Page 108 Current page 109 Page 110 Page 111 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 | Aug 21 2017 Stanford Medicine Magazine Pathways Carla Shatz, her breakthrough discovery in vision and the developing brain
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.
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
news | Aug 10 2017 Stanford Medicine - Scope Open contest with skeleton videos may help people learn, or relearn, to walk If you’re a scientist who wants to do something to help kids with cerebral palsy, your first strategy probably isn’t to launch an internet contest with freaky skeleton videos, but that is more or less what Łukasz Kidziński, PhD, did.
Image news | Aug 8 2017 Stanford Engineering Does autism reflect an excitation-inhibition imbalance in the brain? A Stanford study suggests that aspects of autism reflect a signaling imbalance in certain neurons in the forebrain. Could reversing this imbalance alleviate some symptoms?
Image news | Aug 7 2017 Stanford News Stanford bioengineers encourage virtual competitors to vie for a different kind ... Better models of the bone, muscles and nerves that control our bodies could help doctors manage movement disorders like cerebral palsy. A new competition is crowdsourcing the search for those tools.
Image news | Aug 7 2017 Stanford Medicine - News Center Jennifer Cochran appointed chair of bioengineering Jennifer Cochran, whose research focuses on development of new technologies for high-throughput protein analysis and engineering, succeeds Norbert Pelc.
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.