A new study suggests that how neurons process energy may determine whether they resist damage or begin to break down.
Morning Overview on MSN
New clue explains how some injured neurons resist decline
Neurons are famously fragile, yet some injured cells manage to hang on, stabilize, and even reconnect. That quiet resilience ...
Two types of neurons in the skin may be particularly important for how the brain interprets social contact between people, according to a new study led by Linköping University in Sweden. Knowledge of ...
News Medical on MSN
Spatial computing explains how the brain organizes cognition
Our thoughts are specified by our knowledge and plans, yet our cognition can also be fast and flexible in handling new information.
Closely related dopamine-releasing neurons in the olfactory bulb behave in fundamentally different ways depending on their physical structure.
Scientists have identified a small flaw in the enzyme GPX4 that prevents neurons from defending themselves. This mutation, ...
Scientists found that messenger RNA (mRNA) molecules that carry genetic instructions to the far reaches of neurons in the ...
An international collaboration between researchers at the RIKEN Center for Brain Science (CBS) in Japan, the University of Tokyo, and the University College London has demonstrated that ...
Researchers detail the mechanism of how synapses compete with each other, and how weak and noisy synapses are eliminated during development Fukuoka, Japan—Researchers at Kyushu University have ...
Researchers have discovered that a part of the brain associated with working memory and multisensory integration may also play an important role in how the brain processes social cues. Previous ...
From the smallest fragment of brain tissue, the intricate blueprint of the entire brain is beginning to emerge. Researchers at Baylor College of Medicine are making several time-consuming aspects of ...
Shifting focus on a visual scene without moving our eyes—think driving, or reading a room for the reaction to your joke—is a ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results