China has recently launched the world's first magnetic resonance platform customized for brain-computer interface (BCI) technology in northern Tianjin Municipality, the state-run Xinhua News reported ...
The science pros at The King of Random share an easy guide to building a working magnet motor. ‘Throning’ is a heartbreaking new dating trend. Has social media ruined romance for Gen Z? Sherri Papini ...
Nearly 5% of people — including social media influencer Kim Kardashian — have or will develop a brain aneurysm over the course of their lifetimes, according to Thomas Jefferson University Hospital.
Read full article: Grandfather learns to walk again thanks to special rehab at Orlando Health Arnold Palmer patients get to be ‘conductor for a day’ through Brightline, Orlando Health partnership ...
Cedars-Sinai researchers created “young” immune cells from human stem cells that reversed cognitive decline and Alzheimer’s symptoms in mice. The treated animals showed better memory and healthier ...
Going on antidepressants can give many people their life back, but for some there is a catch. About 25% to 80% of people who take antidepressants experience sexual side effects to some degree during ...
Researchers have synthesized enhanced vitamin K analogues that outperform natural vitamin K in promoting neuron growth. The new compounds, which combine vitamin K with retinoic acid, activate the ...
Time—or the lack of it—could be a missing link in dementia prevention, according to a new paper from UNSW Sydney's Center for Healthy Brain Aging (CHeBA). Lead author and social determinants of health ...
A brain-stimulating procedure has improved symptoms of Parkinson’s disease for a 65-year-old woman in England – with the proof immediately clear when she began playing the clarinet during surgery.
How do people keep the beat to music? When people listen to songs, slow waves of activity in the brain correspond to the perceived beat so that they can tap their feet, nod their heads, or dance along ...
Harvard’s acceptance rate rose this year to 4.18 percent from 3.65 percent, the highest since the Class of 2024 was admitted in 2020. The change was driven largely by a decrease in the number of ...