neuron
VS Ramachandran The neurons that shaped civilization
VS Ramachandran The neurons that shaped civilizationFull Article
UW scientists grow neurons that integrate into brain
Scientists at the University of Wisconsin-Madison have grown human embryonic stem cells into neurons that appear capable of adapting themselves to the brain’s machinery by sending and receiving messages ...Full Article
HUMAN THOUGHT CAN VOLUNTARILY CONTROL NEURONS IN BRAIN
Neuroscience research involving epileptic patients with brain electrodes surgically implanted in their medial temporal lobes shows that patients learned to consciously control individual neurons deep in the brain with ...Full Article
Pineal Gland, the Internal Eye
For thousands of years, the pineal gland was recognized as the human body’s connection to deeper realms of thought—a window into other dimensions. While this notion has faded with ...Full Article
Mirror, Mirror In The Brain: Mirror Neurons, Self-Understanding And Autism Research
Recent findings are rapidly expanding researchers’ understanding of a new class of brain cells — mirror neurons — which are active both when people perform an action and when ...Full Article
Looking At Neurons From All Sides
A new technique that marries a fast-moving laser beam with a special microscope that look at tissues in different optical planes will enable scientists to get a three-dimensional view ...Full Article
Neurons Hard Wired To Tell Left From Right
It’s well known that the left and right sides of the brain differ in many animal species and this is thought to influence cognitive performance and social behaviour. For ...Full Article
New Breakthrough On Link Between Neuronal Activity And Networking Anatomy
A direct link between activity in the brain’s cortex and the microscopic structure of the neuronal network has been shown and published in the open access journal PLoS ONE on May ...Full Article
UCLA researchers make first direct recording of mirror neurons in human brain
Such cells appear to have wider distribution than previously thoughtFull Article