Featured News Image Researcher profiles | Apr 2 2026 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Q&A: ‘To see is to believe’ Faculty Scholar Guosong Hong says that light plays a key role in neuroscience and—and that’s why he’s working with a Big Ideas in Neuroscience team to make transparent brains Image Research news | Apr 1 2026 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Newly identified chronic pain circuit offers pathways to new treatments The research showed that chronic pain is controlled by an entirely separate system than acute pain Image Knight Initiative news | Mar 23 2026 Knight Initiative for Brain Resilience New ideas in aging and resilience research launched by Rosenkranz Foundation and... The Rosenkranz Aging and Rejuvenation Seed Grant Program announced eight innovative new research projects with additional support from the Knight Initiative for Brain Resilience Image Wu Tsai Neuro News | Mar 23 2026 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Announcing the 2026 Neurosciences Postdoctoral Scholars Ten innovative postdoctoral scholars will pursue creative approaches to advance neuroscience and brain resilience research News Filter & Sort Sort by ThemeNeuroDiscovery NeuroHealth NeuroEngineering News TypeResearch news Press coverage Awards and honors Wu Tsai Neuro News Podcast episodes Researcher profiles News Features Knight Initiative news Director's messages Sort by Newest to oldest Oldest to newest Image 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 Research news | Sep 12 2016 Stanford News Brain-sensing technology developed by Stanford scientists allows typing at rate ... Technology for reading signals directly from the brain developed by Stanford Bio-X scientists could provide a way for people with movement disorders to communicate. 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 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute 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. Image 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 Image 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. Image 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. Image Awards and honors | Sep 6 2016 Champalimaud Foundation Carla Shatz wins the 2016 Antonio Champalimaud Vision Award The 2016 Antonio Champalimaud Vision Award recognises ground-breaking work that has illuminated our understanding of the way in which our eyes send signals to the appropriate areas of the brain. This work may offer hope of fighting vision disorders by mea Image 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. Image Research news | Sep 5 2016 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Investigators identify brain circuit that drives sleep-wake states Inhibiting the firing of nerve cells in a brain area long known to guide goal-directed behavior makes mice build nests and fall asleep, a new study shows. Stimulating the circuit roused the mice and kept them awake. Image Press coverage | Sep 1 2016 New York Times How Tech Giants Are Devising Real Ethics for Artificial Intelligence For years, science-fiction moviemakers have been making us fear the bad things that artificially intelligent machines might do to their human creators. But for the next decade or two, our biggest concern is more likely to be that robots will take away our Image Research news | Sep 1 2016 Stanford Medicine - News Center Patients newly diagnosed with breast cancer sought for study on treatment decisi... The study is designed to collect neurophysiological and psychological information from women faced with a breast cancer diagnosis and many treatment decisions. Image Research news | Aug 29 2016 Stanford Medicine - Scope Chemical spray paint identifies new proteins in synapse Alice Ting's lab bustles with students working on projects relating to technologies for studying living cells in exacting molecular detail. Image Press coverage | Aug 25 2016 The Kavli Foundation Rewiring the brain: A conversation with three pioneers of neuroplasticity Three scientists discuss their pioneering discoveries about neuroplasticity, the brain's remarkable capacity to change throughout our lifetimes. For their research, Eve Marder, Michael Merzenich and Carla Shatz were named the 2016 Kavli Prize laureates in Image Awards and honors | Aug 24 2016 Stanford Medicine - Scope New award rewards reproducing existing research The first research paper to describe a new phenomenon gets all the glory. A high profile publication. A great line on the scientist’s CV. Another step toward tenure. What about the paper that verifies or fails to verify the phenomenon? That researcher ra Image Research news | Aug 22 2016 Stanford Medicine - Scope Alzheimer’s puzzle pieces are coming together The early stages of Alzheimer disease is marked by the wholesale destruction of synapses — junctions where neurons relay impulses from one cell to the next. As the condition progresses, whole nerve cells and even entire nerve circuits in the brain start t Pagination Previous page Page 75 Page 76 Current page 77 Page 78 Page 79 Next page
Image Researcher profiles | Apr 2 2026 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Q&A: ‘To see is to believe’ Faculty Scholar Guosong Hong says that light plays a key role in neuroscience and—and that’s why he’s working with a Big Ideas in Neuroscience team to make transparent brains
Image Research news | Apr 1 2026 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Newly identified chronic pain circuit offers pathways to new treatments The research showed that chronic pain is controlled by an entirely separate system than acute pain
Image Knight Initiative news | Mar 23 2026 Knight Initiative for Brain Resilience New ideas in aging and resilience research launched by Rosenkranz Foundation and... The Rosenkranz Aging and Rejuvenation Seed Grant Program announced eight innovative new research projects with additional support from the Knight Initiative for Brain Resilience
Image Wu Tsai Neuro News | Mar 23 2026 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Announcing the 2026 Neurosciences Postdoctoral Scholars Ten innovative postdoctoral scholars will pursue creative approaches to advance neuroscience and brain resilience research
Image 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 Research news | Sep 12 2016 Stanford News Brain-sensing technology developed by Stanford scientists allows typing at rate ... Technology for reading signals directly from the brain developed by Stanford Bio-X scientists could provide a way for people with movement disorders to communicate.
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 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute 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.
Image 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
Image 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.
Image 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.
Image Awards and honors | Sep 6 2016 Champalimaud Foundation Carla Shatz wins the 2016 Antonio Champalimaud Vision Award The 2016 Antonio Champalimaud Vision Award recognises ground-breaking work that has illuminated our understanding of the way in which our eyes send signals to the appropriate areas of the brain. This work may offer hope of fighting vision disorders by mea
Image 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.
Image Research news | Sep 5 2016 Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute Investigators identify brain circuit that drives sleep-wake states Inhibiting the firing of nerve cells in a brain area long known to guide goal-directed behavior makes mice build nests and fall asleep, a new study shows. Stimulating the circuit roused the mice and kept them awake.
Image Press coverage | Sep 1 2016 New York Times How Tech Giants Are Devising Real Ethics for Artificial Intelligence For years, science-fiction moviemakers have been making us fear the bad things that artificially intelligent machines might do to their human creators. But for the next decade or two, our biggest concern is more likely to be that robots will take away our
Image Research news | Sep 1 2016 Stanford Medicine - News Center Patients newly diagnosed with breast cancer sought for study on treatment decisi... The study is designed to collect neurophysiological and psychological information from women faced with a breast cancer diagnosis and many treatment decisions.
Image Research news | Aug 29 2016 Stanford Medicine - Scope Chemical spray paint identifies new proteins in synapse Alice Ting's lab bustles with students working on projects relating to technologies for studying living cells in exacting molecular detail.
Image Press coverage | Aug 25 2016 The Kavli Foundation Rewiring the brain: A conversation with three pioneers of neuroplasticity Three scientists discuss their pioneering discoveries about neuroplasticity, the brain's remarkable capacity to change throughout our lifetimes. For their research, Eve Marder, Michael Merzenich and Carla Shatz were named the 2016 Kavli Prize laureates in
Image Awards and honors | Aug 24 2016 Stanford Medicine - Scope New award rewards reproducing existing research The first research paper to describe a new phenomenon gets all the glory. A high profile publication. A great line on the scientist’s CV. Another step toward tenure. What about the paper that verifies or fails to verify the phenomenon? That researcher ra
Image Research news | Aug 22 2016 Stanford Medicine - Scope Alzheimer’s puzzle pieces are coming together The early stages of Alzheimer disease is marked by the wholesale destruction of synapses — junctions where neurons relay impulses from one cell to the next. As the condition progresses, whole nerve cells and even entire nerve circuits in the brain start t