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 | Apr 2 2015 Stanford Engineering Five Faculty Members Receive NSF Early Career Development Awards Assistant professors Amin Arbabian, Michael Lepech, Marco Pavone, Manu Prakash and Sindy Tang awarded grants to help promising junior faculty pursue outstanding research while also improving education. Image news | Mar 17 2015 Stanford News Stanford neuroscientists find that noisy neurons are critical for learning A computer model of brain function helps explain a 20-year-old finding that the way a single noisy neuron fires in the brain can predict an animal's decisions. It turns out neurons without noise can't learn. The type of learning the group modeled reflects news | Feb 9 2015 Popular Science Laser-Controlled and See-Through Brains Get Biomedical Prize In addition to being scientifically important, Karl Deisseroth's research makes for some really cool-looking pictures. news | Feb 5 2015 Huff Post World Economic Forum Davos 2015 Wrap-Up: Get Ready for Breakthroughs About the Brain Interestingly, and on a cheerier note, one of the biggest themes programmed into the Davos agenda this January was a series of events on the new scientific developments about the brain. news | Feb 4 2015 Stanford Medicine - Scope Study: Major psychiatric disorders share common deficits in brain’s executive-fu... BY Bruce Goldman Image news | Feb 4 2015 Stanford Medicine - News Center Different mental disorders cause same brain-matter loss, study finds A meta-analysis of 193 brain-imaging studies shows similar gray-matter loss in the brains of people with diagnoses as different as schizophrenia, depression and addiction. Image news | Feb 3 2015 Stanford News Unlocking the brain’s plasticity Depressing but true: people are less able to form new brain connections as they grow older. Undergraduate Richie Sapp was part of a team whose research could make it easier for adults to learn, and possibly heal after brain injuries. Image news | Feb 3 2015 Stanford Medicine - News Center Study ties immune cells to delayed onset of post-stroke dementia Researchers say that the appearance in the brain of a type of immune cell has been implicated in delayed dementia in mice and humans who have suffered a stroke. Pagination Previous page Page 138 Page 139 Current page 140 Page 141 Page 142 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 | Apr 2 2015 Stanford Engineering Five Faculty Members Receive NSF Early Career Development Awards Assistant professors Amin Arbabian, Michael Lepech, Marco Pavone, Manu Prakash and Sindy Tang awarded grants to help promising junior faculty pursue outstanding research while also improving education.
Image news | Mar 17 2015 Stanford News Stanford neuroscientists find that noisy neurons are critical for learning A computer model of brain function helps explain a 20-year-old finding that the way a single noisy neuron fires in the brain can predict an animal's decisions. It turns out neurons without noise can't learn. The type of learning the group modeled reflects
news | Feb 9 2015 Popular Science Laser-Controlled and See-Through Brains Get Biomedical Prize In addition to being scientifically important, Karl Deisseroth's research makes for some really cool-looking pictures.
news | Feb 5 2015 Huff Post World Economic Forum Davos 2015 Wrap-Up: Get Ready for Breakthroughs About the Brain Interestingly, and on a cheerier note, one of the biggest themes programmed into the Davos agenda this January was a series of events on the new scientific developments about the brain.
news | Feb 4 2015 Stanford Medicine - Scope Study: Major psychiatric disorders share common deficits in brain’s executive-fu... BY Bruce Goldman
Image news | Feb 4 2015 Stanford Medicine - News Center Different mental disorders cause same brain-matter loss, study finds A meta-analysis of 193 brain-imaging studies shows similar gray-matter loss in the brains of people with diagnoses as different as schizophrenia, depression and addiction.
Image news | Feb 3 2015 Stanford News Unlocking the brain’s plasticity Depressing but true: people are less able to form new brain connections as they grow older. Undergraduate Richie Sapp was part of a team whose research could make it easier for adults to learn, and possibly heal after brain injuries.
Image news | Feb 3 2015 Stanford Medicine - News Center Study ties immune cells to delayed onset of post-stroke dementia Researchers say that the appearance in the brain of a type of immune cell has been implicated in delayed dementia in mice and humans who have suffered a stroke.