The Packard Center and ALS United will fund a preclinical study investigating how abnormal TDP-43 protein contributes to ALS.
Fiber-optic technology revolutionized the telecommunications industry and may soon do the same for brain research.
News-Medical.Net on MSN
Free radicals generated at a specific site in astrocytes may promote dementia
Researchers have discovered that free radicals generated at a specific site in non-neuronal brain cells called astrocytes, ...
Free radicals generated at a specific site in non-neuronal brain cells called astrocytes may promote dementia, according to a ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Brain-inspired chips are helping electronic noses better mimic human sense of smell
After years of trying, the electronic nose is finally making major progress in sensing smells, almost as well as its human ...
Boost your brainpower and keep it young with simple exercises! Neuroscientist Robert Lowe reveals how resistance training, dual-task workouts, and leg ...
New research from Johns Hopkins Medicine shows that the enzyme biliverdin reductase A (BVRA) plays a direct protective role ...
However, resistance training may have a more potent impact on insulin-like growth factor-1, a hormone that plays a role in ...
Texas may be on the verge of one of its largest-ever investments in brain health research. On Tuesday’s ballot, Proposition ...
In light of this research, Dr Steven Allder, consultant neurologist at Re:Cognition Health, has highlighted several other key ...
News-Medical.Net on MSN
PRIME fiber-optic device can manipulate neural activity deep in the brain
Fiber-optic technology revolutionized the telecommunications industry and may soon do the same for brain research.
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