Featured News Image Featured News | Jun 7 2024 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Koret Human Neurosciences Community Lab Announces Inaugural Pilot Grant Awards To advance neuroscience research using EEG and TMS technologies, the Koret Human Neurosciences Community Lab has awarded its inaugural Human Neuroscience Pilot Grants to ten innovative research projects. Image Featured News | May 28 2024 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Neuroscientists use AI to simulate how the brain makes sense of the visual world A research team at Stanford’s Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute has made a major stride in using AI to replicate how the brain organizes sensory information to make sense of the world, opening up new frontiers for virtual neuroscience. Image Featured News | May 25 2024 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute NeuroChoice: Eight years of forging connections to illuminate and empower choice Wu Tsai Neuro's multidisciplinary "Big Ideas in Neuroscience" initiative connected addiction-focused basic research, clinical application, and public policy to create a community across traditional disciplinary boundaries, deepening understanding of decision-making. Image Featured News | May 23 2024 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Neuroscience and AI: What artificial intelligence teaches us about the brain (an... This week, we talk with Surya Ganguli about the neuroscience of AI, and how advances artificial intelligence could teach us about our own brains. 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 Research news | Sep 12 2016 Stanford Medicine - Scope Technology for typing with brain signals could allow paralyzed people to communi... Engineer Krishna Shenoy, PhD, and graduate student (and then postdoctoral fellow) Paul Nuyujukian, MD, PhD, have updated the algorithms for how they translate the brain signals into typing, which they tested in a series of studies. Press coverage | Sep 12 2016 U.S.News - Health Care In Need of Brain Breakthroughs A look at where research stands on some of the most devastating brain diseases. Image Researcher profiles | Sep 9 2016 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Mitochondrial meltdown in Parkinson’s disease: Q & A with neuroscientist Xinnan ... We discovered that this impairment in regulation of Miro may actually underlie both familial (inherited) and sporadic (not inherited, or unknown family tree) forms of Parkinson’s disease. Image Research news | Sep 8 2016 Stanford Medicine - News Center Common molecular mechanism of Parkinson’s pathology discovered in study Intracellular defects that lead to cells’ failure to decommission faulty “power packs” known as mitochondria cause nerve cells to die, triggering the symptoms of Parkinson’s disease. Research news | Sep 8 2016 Stanford Medicine - Scope Thousands of queries, added funds fuel pushoff from successful Stanford vision-r... Glaucoma, which affects nearly 70 million people worldwide, is caused by excessive pressure on the optic nerve — essentially the same kind of damage relieved by the manipulations in Andy Huberman’s study of restoration of vision in living mammals. Research news | Sep 8 2016 Stanford Medicine - Scope LRRKing in the shadows: Likely hidden pathological mechanism of Parkinson’s dise... Parkinson’s disease, the second-leading neurodegenerative disorder after Alzheimer’s disease, affects one in every 60-70 Americans age 65 or older. Researcher profiles | Sep 8 2016 Scientific American Q&A: Why a Rested Brain Is More Creative Taking breaks—from naps to sabbaticals—can help us to refocus and recharge Research news | Sep 6 2016 Stanford Medicine - Scope Easing into slumber requires newly identified “sleep/wake” brain circuit… and a ... In a new study in Nature Neuroscience, Ada Eban-Rothschild, PhD, Luis de Lecea, PhD, and their fellow Stanford neuroscientists identified a brain circuit that’s indispensable to the sleep-wake cycle as well as a key component of the reward system. Pagination Previous page Page 123 Page 124 Current page 125 Page 126 Page 127 Next page
Image Featured News | Jun 7 2024 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Koret Human Neurosciences Community Lab Announces Inaugural Pilot Grant Awards To advance neuroscience research using EEG and TMS technologies, the Koret Human Neurosciences Community Lab has awarded its inaugural Human Neuroscience Pilot Grants to ten innovative research projects.
Image Featured News | May 28 2024 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Neuroscientists use AI to simulate how the brain makes sense of the visual world A research team at Stanford’s Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute has made a major stride in using AI to replicate how the brain organizes sensory information to make sense of the world, opening up new frontiers for virtual neuroscience.
Image Featured News | May 25 2024 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute NeuroChoice: Eight years of forging connections to illuminate and empower choice Wu Tsai Neuro's multidisciplinary "Big Ideas in Neuroscience" initiative connected addiction-focused basic research, clinical application, and public policy to create a community across traditional disciplinary boundaries, deepening understanding of decision-making.
Image Featured News | May 23 2024 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Neuroscience and AI: What artificial intelligence teaches us about the brain (an... This week, we talk with Surya Ganguli about the neuroscience of AI, and how advances artificial intelligence could teach us about our own brains.
Research news | Sep 12 2016 Stanford Medicine - Scope Technology for typing with brain signals could allow paralyzed people to communi... Engineer Krishna Shenoy, PhD, and graduate student (and then postdoctoral fellow) Paul Nuyujukian, MD, PhD, have updated the algorithms for how they translate the brain signals into typing, which they tested in a series of studies.
Press coverage | Sep 12 2016 U.S.News - Health Care In Need of Brain Breakthroughs A look at where research stands on some of the most devastating brain diseases.
Image Researcher profiles | Sep 9 2016 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Mitochondrial meltdown in Parkinson’s disease: Q & A with neuroscientist Xinnan ... We discovered that this impairment in regulation of Miro may actually underlie both familial (inherited) and sporadic (not inherited, or unknown family tree) forms of Parkinson’s disease.
Image Research news | Sep 8 2016 Stanford Medicine - News Center Common molecular mechanism of Parkinson’s pathology discovered in study Intracellular defects that lead to cells’ failure to decommission faulty “power packs” known as mitochondria cause nerve cells to die, triggering the symptoms of Parkinson’s disease.
Research news | Sep 8 2016 Stanford Medicine - Scope Thousands of queries, added funds fuel pushoff from successful Stanford vision-r... Glaucoma, which affects nearly 70 million people worldwide, is caused by excessive pressure on the optic nerve — essentially the same kind of damage relieved by the manipulations in Andy Huberman’s study of restoration of vision in living mammals.
Research news | Sep 8 2016 Stanford Medicine - Scope LRRKing in the shadows: Likely hidden pathological mechanism of Parkinson’s dise... Parkinson’s disease, the second-leading neurodegenerative disorder after Alzheimer’s disease, affects one in every 60-70 Americans age 65 or older.
Researcher profiles | Sep 8 2016 Scientific American Q&A: Why a Rested Brain Is More Creative Taking breaks—from naps to sabbaticals—can help us to refocus and recharge
Research news | Sep 6 2016 Stanford Medicine - Scope Easing into slumber requires newly identified “sleep/wake” brain circuit… and a ... In a new study in Nature Neuroscience, Ada Eban-Rothschild, PhD, Luis de Lecea, PhD, and their fellow Stanford neuroscientists identified a brain circuit that’s indispensable to the sleep-wake cycle as well as a key component of the reward system.