Featured News Image news | May 9 2024 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Psychedelics Inside Out: How do LSD and psilocybin alter our perceptions? (Part ... This week on From Our Neurons to Yours, we talk with anesthesiologist Boris Heifets about how psychedelics work in the brain. How do tiny quantities of these chemicals alter our perception of reality? And what does that say about... reality? Image news | May 7 2024 Wu Tsai Neuro Exploring MRI's role in neuroscience research on model organisms Recognizing the potential for wider application in small-animal neuroscience research, the Neurosciences Preclinical Imaging Lab (NPIL) at Wu Tsai Neuro hosted its 3rd annual symposium and named the recipients of its Pilot Grants. 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 | Jun 28 2016 Stanford Medicine - News Center Three researchers receive awards to study epilepsy Juliet Knowles, Megan Wyeth and Christopher Makinson awarded American Epilepsy Society grants. news | Jun 27 2016 KQED Stanford’s Virtual Reality Lab Cultivates Empathy for the Homeless Empathy at Scale, is a study that puts participants in a variety of scenes designed to help them imagine the experience of being homeless themselves. Image news | Jun 21 2016 NIH Director's Blog Creative Minds: A New Chemistry for Aging Research? Tony Wyss-Coray recently received a 2015 NIH Director’s Pioneer Award to build a potentially game-changing tool to track the aging process in mice. news | Jun 16 2016 Stanford Medicine - Scope Steady strides in multiple-sclerosis therapeutics research All too often, you read of a basic-research advance that promises to lead to new therapies — and then you never hear about it again. But this time there’s some follow-up to report on the multiple-sclerosis therapy front. news | Jun 15 2016 Stanford Medicine - Scope Training creativity: To obtain a zany brain, don’t strain it. Unchain it. A new study published in Cerebral Cortex suggested that spontaneous improvisation — not only can be improved by training, but also appears to correspond to a particular state of brain activity characterized by the suppression of the very brain centers see news | Jun 3 2016 Stanford Medicine - Scope “You guys can toast me, but I want to toast you”: Stanford’s Carla Shatz celebra... As previously announced, Stanford neuroscientist Carla Shatz, PhD, received the happy news that she was a winner of the Kavli Prize in Neuroscience; here now is a look at the scene in her lab yesterday afternoon. Image news | Jun 2 2016 Stanford Medicine - News Center Stem cells shown safe, beneficial for chronic stroke patients People disabled by a stroke demonstrated substantial recovery long after the event when modified adult stem cells were injected into their brains. news | Jun 2 2016 Stanford Medicine - Scope Stroke of luck: Stem-cell transplants show strong signs of efficacy in clinical ... Sonia Olea Coontz, suffered a stroke in 2011 that left her limping. Now, thanks to an experimental procedure she underwent in 2013 — a full two years later — she’s jogging. Pagination Previous page Page 124 Page 125 Current page 126 Page 127 Page 128 Next page
Image news | May 9 2024 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Psychedelics Inside Out: How do LSD and psilocybin alter our perceptions? (Part ... This week on From Our Neurons to Yours, we talk with anesthesiologist Boris Heifets about how psychedelics work in the brain. How do tiny quantities of these chemicals alter our perception of reality? And what does that say about... reality?
Image news | May 7 2024 Wu Tsai Neuro Exploring MRI's role in neuroscience research on model organisms Recognizing the potential for wider application in small-animal neuroscience research, the Neurosciences Preclinical Imaging Lab (NPIL) at Wu Tsai Neuro hosted its 3rd annual symposium and named the recipients of its Pilot Grants.
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 | Jun 28 2016 Stanford Medicine - News Center Three researchers receive awards to study epilepsy Juliet Knowles, Megan Wyeth and Christopher Makinson awarded American Epilepsy Society grants.
news | Jun 27 2016 KQED Stanford’s Virtual Reality Lab Cultivates Empathy for the Homeless Empathy at Scale, is a study that puts participants in a variety of scenes designed to help them imagine the experience of being homeless themselves.
Image news | Jun 21 2016 NIH Director's Blog Creative Minds: A New Chemistry for Aging Research? Tony Wyss-Coray recently received a 2015 NIH Director’s Pioneer Award to build a potentially game-changing tool to track the aging process in mice.
news | Jun 16 2016 Stanford Medicine - Scope Steady strides in multiple-sclerosis therapeutics research All too often, you read of a basic-research advance that promises to lead to new therapies — and then you never hear about it again. But this time there’s some follow-up to report on the multiple-sclerosis therapy front.
news | Jun 15 2016 Stanford Medicine - Scope Training creativity: To obtain a zany brain, don’t strain it. Unchain it. A new study published in Cerebral Cortex suggested that spontaneous improvisation — not only can be improved by training, but also appears to correspond to a particular state of brain activity characterized by the suppression of the very brain centers see
news | Jun 3 2016 Stanford Medicine - Scope “You guys can toast me, but I want to toast you”: Stanford’s Carla Shatz celebra... As previously announced, Stanford neuroscientist Carla Shatz, PhD, received the happy news that she was a winner of the Kavli Prize in Neuroscience; here now is a look at the scene in her lab yesterday afternoon.
Image news | Jun 2 2016 Stanford Medicine - News Center Stem cells shown safe, beneficial for chronic stroke patients People disabled by a stroke demonstrated substantial recovery long after the event when modified adult stem cells were injected into their brains.
news | Jun 2 2016 Stanford Medicine - Scope Stroke of luck: Stem-cell transplants show strong signs of efficacy in clinical ... Sonia Olea Coontz, suffered a stroke in 2011 that left her limping. Now, thanks to an experimental procedure she underwent in 2013 — a full two years later — she’s jogging.