Featured News Image news | Apr 25 2024 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Why our brains are bad at climate change This week on From Our Neurons to Yours, we talk with neuroeconomist Nik Sawe about the neuroscience of environmental decision-making, and why long-term thinking is so hard for our brains 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 | Jul 18 2017 Stanford Medicine - Scope Brain scans shown to predict how well PTSD patients respond to therapy Using neuroscience to help determine the best treatment plans for patients with psychiatric conditions — everything from depression to anxiety to bipolar disorder — is a growing area of research in a field that is in desperately in need of better treatmen news | Jul 13 2017 The New York Times When Your Doctor Is Fitter Than You Are some patients, particularly those battling weight issues, a doctor’s declarations of personal fitness may not have the intended effect of attracting new patients. Instead, rather than inspiring them, it can drive them away. news | Jun 30 2017 Science Extraordinary and poor Stanford postdoc Peng Yuan authored a Working Life piece on the financial reality of supporting a family on a postdoc salary in the Silicon Valley. news | Jun 26 2017 Harvard Business Review Why You Should Tell Your Team to Take a Break and Go Outside Wellness programs are becoming an integral priority for most human resource managers. After all, research shows that a happier workplace is more productive. There is one important wellness factor that many are forgetting even though it may be the most pot Image news | Jun 22 2017 Stanford Medicine - News Center Annual awards honor outstanding teaching, patient care Stanford Medicine faculty, staff, residents and students were honored for teaching and clinical skills. 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 news | Jun 22 2017 Stanford News 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. news | Jun 5 2017 Stanford Medicine - Scope Inside the heads of men and women: A look at sex-based cognitive differences New technologies and new hypotheses have generated a growing pile of evidence that there are inherent differences in how men’s and women’s brains are wired and how they work. Pagination Previous page Page 109 Page 110 Current page 111 Page 112 Page 113 Next page
Image news | Apr 25 2024 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Why our brains are bad at climate change This week on From Our Neurons to Yours, we talk with neuroeconomist Nik Sawe about the neuroscience of environmental decision-making, and why long-term thinking is so hard for our brains
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 | Jul 18 2017 Stanford Medicine - Scope Brain scans shown to predict how well PTSD patients respond to therapy Using neuroscience to help determine the best treatment plans for patients with psychiatric conditions — everything from depression to anxiety to bipolar disorder — is a growing area of research in a field that is in desperately in need of better treatmen
news | Jul 13 2017 The New York Times When Your Doctor Is Fitter Than You Are some patients, particularly those battling weight issues, a doctor’s declarations of personal fitness may not have the intended effect of attracting new patients. Instead, rather than inspiring them, it can drive them away.
news | Jun 30 2017 Science Extraordinary and poor Stanford postdoc Peng Yuan authored a Working Life piece on the financial reality of supporting a family on a postdoc salary in the Silicon Valley.
news | Jun 26 2017 Harvard Business Review Why You Should Tell Your Team to Take a Break and Go Outside Wellness programs are becoming an integral priority for most human resource managers. After all, research shows that a happier workplace is more productive. There is one important wellness factor that many are forgetting even though it may be the most pot
Image news | Jun 22 2017 Stanford Medicine - News Center Annual awards honor outstanding teaching, patient care Stanford Medicine faculty, staff, residents and students were honored for teaching and clinical skills.
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 news | Jun 22 2017 Stanford News 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.
news | Jun 5 2017 Stanford Medicine - Scope Inside the heads of men and women: A look at sex-based cognitive differences New technologies and new hypotheses have generated a growing pile of evidence that there are inherent differences in how men’s and women’s brains are wired and how they work.