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35 votes
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Scientists document first-ever transmitted Alzheimer’s cases, tied to no-longer-used medical procedure
28 votes -
People with a "second brain": Why? How?
I've been looking around at different note-taking apps (Notion, Obsidian, Anytype, Joplin, Logseq, etc.) after seeing a few videos about the idea of having a "second brain", and only how has the...
I've been looking around at different note-taking apps (Notion, Obsidian, Anytype, Joplin, Logseq, etc.) after seeing a few videos about the idea of having a "second brain", and only how has the the thought popped into my mind, "What's the point?". A “second brain” seems like it would require spending too much processing power on something that only exists to exist. What are the chances there you're going to remember any given thing after writing it down? You haven’t filled up your first brain yet. This all sounds very pessimistic - my intention is not to insult anyone's choice to use these tools, but I'm curious of what benefits people have gotten from their "second brains". Maybe I'm just the wrong kind of person for it, or maybe it's just that I'm not used to writing things down.
Edit: I'm coming to an interesting conclusion that many people use their version of a second brain for things they need to do. This isn't really what I was referring to, I was more looking at it as a form of journaling or personal research, which might be less common?
33 votes -
Psychoactive drug ibogaine effectively treats traumatic brain injury in special ops military vets
31 votes -
Brain tissue on a chip achieves voice recognition
30 votes -
Scientists use transcranial magnetic stimulation to make patients with chronic pain more hypnotizable
11 votes -
Reindeer combine sleeping and digesting, Norwegian researchers found after extracting reindeer brain data
9 votes -
Wasabi linked to ‘substantial’ memory boost
28 votes -
What causes fainting? Scientists finally have an answer.
22 votes -
Neuralink competitor Precision Neuroscience buys factory to build its brain implants
14 votes -
The gruesome story of how Neuralink’s monkeys actually died
43 votes -
Recent neuroscience research suggests that popular strategies to control dopamine are based on an overly narrow view of how it functions
17 votes -
Neuralink is recruiting subjects for the first human trial of its brain-computer interface
9 votes -
Searching for Maura
9 votes -
Maryland school district sues social media alleging addictive design rewires young brains
20 votes -
Boston University - Study finds CTE in 40% of athletes who died before thirty
15 votes -
Live roundworm found in Australian woman's brain in world-first discovery
14 votes -
How a brain implant and AI gave a woman with paralysis her voice back
15 votes -
Brain recordings capture musicality of speech — with help from Pink Floyd
8 votes -
Consciousness and intrinsic brain information
5 votes -
The reshuffling of neurons during fruit fly metamorphosis suggests that larval memories don’t persist in adults
27 votes -
Computer chip with built-in human brain tissue gets military funding
39 votes -
Study shows if music gives you chills or goosebumps, you may have a special brain
60 votes -
‘Boxing is a mess’: The darkness and damage of brain trauma in the ring
23 votes -
What is reality? Lisa Feldman Barrett, a neuroscientist explains.
5 votes -
Why depression after traumatic brain injury is distinct — and less likely to respond to standard treatment
Traumatic brain injury multiplies the risk of major depression eightfold. While the emotional trauma of whatever caused such deep damage may be understandable, from a blast in a war zone to a blow...
Traumatic brain injury multiplies the risk of major depression eightfold. While the emotional trauma of whatever caused such deep damage may be understandable, from a blast in a war zone to a blow on the playing field, there’s a physiological component, too, that neuroscientists have long suspected but have been unable to identify.
“As clinicians, a lot of us had a gut feeling that [TBI-associated depression] is a different disease,” said Shan Siddiqi, a Harvard Medical School assistant professor of psychiatry and a clinical neuropsychiatrist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. “Why did nobody detect it before? I think the reason is because unlike other psychiatric disorders, TBI caused a sort of structural reorganization of the brain.”
https://www.statnews.com/2023/07/06/depression-after-traumatic-brain-injury/
16 votes -
Having an out-of-body experience? Blame this sausage-shaped piece of your brain.
10 votes -
Injection of kidney protein improves working memory in monkeys
9 votes -
Lonely people see the world differently, according to their brains
30 votes -
ChubbyEmu case study of a victim of unlicensed food truck
14 votes -
Neuroscientists show that brain waves synchronize when people interact
11 votes -
Nanoplastic ingestion causes neurological deficits
8 votes -
Soft ‘e-skin’ generates nerve-like impulses that talk to the brain
8 votes -
Why the brain’s connections to the body are crisscrossed
6 votes -
How our team overturned the ninety-year-old metaphor of a ‘little man’ in the brain who controls movement
4 votes -
Forget the Pokédex, our brains contain a ‘rich cognitive map’ of Pokémon
6 votes -
Bioluminescence helps researchers develop cancer drugs for brain
3 votes -
‘I got a brain injury and a life sentence’: The hidden legacy of male violence against women
3 votes -
Long COVID now looks like a neurological disease, helping doctors to focus treatments
4 votes -
Depression has often been blamed on low levels of serotonin in the brain. That answer is insufficient, but alternatives are coming into view and changing our understanding of the disease.
9 votes -
Expanding the brain. Literally.
3 votes -
Neuralink is under federal investigation for potential animal-welfare violations amid internal staff complaints that its animal testing is being rushed, causing needless suffering and deaths
7 votes -
10,000 brains in a basement: The dark and mysterious origins of Denmark’s psychiatric brain collection
6 votes -
Bed Habits - One insomniac’s descent into the world of sleep research to understand what screens before bed are doing to our brains
4 votes -
10,000 brains in a basement – the dark and mysterious origins of Denmark's psychiatric brain collection
8 votes -
Brain holograms with Blender and Looking Glass
8 votes -
Is your smartphone ruining your memory? A special report on the rise of ‘digital amnesia’
12 votes -
Under anesthesia, where do our minds go? To better understand our brains and design safer anesthesia, scientists are turning to EEG.
8 votes -
Mind uploading
9 votes -
Scotty Allen of Strange Parts, YouTube channel update - "I have a brain injury"
5 votes