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Tiny models of the brain are becoming more complex. When should the ethicists step in?
Stroke researchers marvel at what hibernating animals can do. Now they’re searching for strategies that would benefit patients.
At long last, new therapies—including heat treatments and psychoactive drugs—are offering relief for people with depression.
Expensive, clunky yet clinically invaluable, the positron emission tomography scanner is due for reinvention.
A barrage of well-timed noises may, surprisingly, make for a more restful night’s sleep.
A high-fat, high-sugar diet can cause harm to the hippocampus—and that may lead, perversely, to even worse impulses around unhealthy food.
Miniature versions of organs help scientists understand disease and fine-tune treatments in ways that work in mice can’t match.
Artist and multiple sclerosis patient Elizabeth Jameson turns her brain scans into works of art.
Regular exercise has long been associated with better brain function, but researchers are only now piecing together how and why that happens.
By studying the mysteries of anesthesia and how it affects the brain, Patrick Purdon may have found a new way to predict Alzheimer’s disease and other neurodegenerative conditions.
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