
Brain World Magazine
@brainworldmag
An online magazine dedicated to your brain—we explore how neuroscience impacts our culture, education, health, society, technology, wellness, and more.
ID: 193090142
https://brainworldmagazine.com 20-09-2010 23:14:46
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"A newly discovered kind of brain cell involved in memory formation seems to mark the boundary between distinct events as we experience them. The neurons, which have been called 'boundary cells,' fire when new events happen," reports Clare Wilson. 🧠 newscientist.com/article/231107…


"This is just how the brain changes with chronic stress. It's doing it to try to protect me ... Having that kind of insight and perspective can break the vicious cycle where you're blaming yourself for not being better," says Yale School of Medicine's Dr. Amy Arnsten. 🧠 cnn.com/2022/03/10/hea…

"A huge unanswered challenge in artificial intelligence, namely the problem of building algorithms that can learn continually without corrupting previously learned information. The brain manifestly achieves this," says Cambridge University's Dr. Timothy O’Leary. neurosciencenews.com/plastic-stable…



"The brain is like an orchestra. In a symphony, instruments play diverse tunes with different tempos and timbres ... The ensemble of neuronal activities mediates specific aspects of our behavior," says Max Planck Florida Institute for Neuroscience's Dr. Hidehiko Inagaki. 🧠 #neuroscience neurosciencenews.com/planned-action…


"The true marvel of the brain—its control of behavior. It is the processing and translation of sensory information into appropriate behaviors that—is the key to understanding how the brain actually works," says @Tim_Jorgensen. 🧠 #neuroscience 🔬 #research press.princeton.edu/ideas/is-the-h…

"Santiago Ramón y Cajal is known as the father of modern neuroscience. Cajal was the first to see that the brain is built of discrete cells, the 'butterflies of the soul,' as he put it, that hold our memories, thoughts, and emotions," says @LSScienceNews. sciencenews.org/article/brain-…

"Profit-seeking companies & individuals now have a new weapon: It is no longer necessary to demonstrate the effectiveness of their proposed therapies; it's enough to assert they work because of the placebo effect," says Knowable Magazine's Fabrizio Benedetti. knowablemagazine.org/article/societ…

"One of the things that was shocking to everybody at the time and now seems fairly mundane is that his brain looks just like anybody else's ... there's no evidence that you can predict a genius brain," says Carnegie Mellon University's Dr. Timothy Verstynen. 🧠 inverse.com/science/contro…

"I think everybody has thought that there's a whole range of ways that a brain could be storing memories. The beauty of it is, I bet all of them are right. And the question's going to be: How does it all work together?" says USC's Dr. Scott Fraser. 🔍🧠 quantamagazine.org/scientists-wat…

"For people with misophonia there is abnormal communication between the auditory and motor brain regions ... a 'super-sensitized connection.' 🧠 This is the first time such a connection in the brain has been identified for the condition," says @SKumar_NCL. sciencealert.com/can-t-stand-so…


"Forgiveness is my safety valve against the kind of toxic anger that could kill me. Waiting for the apology is to misunderstand your free will—it's to misunderstand the medicine that is forgiveness," says UW–Madison's Dr. Robert Enright. 🧠 #MentalHealth vox.com/22967752/how-t…

"Our finding that cortical areas are sparsely connected implies that this integration is accomplished either via linkage of the dense local connections or by rare, extraordinarily privileged long-range axons," says UC San Diego's @BqRosen_. 🧠 #neuroscience neurosciencenews.com/axon-density-b…

"The brain not only merges images from the previous 15 seconds, but it also operates on a 15-second delay ... operating on a delay means we may unknowingly blend images from the past into our present," reports Discover Magazine's Emilie Le Beau Lucchesi. 🧠 discovermagazine.com/mind/why-our-b…
