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37 votes
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‘The Body Keeps the Score’ offers uncertain [and misleading] science in the name of self-help. It’s not alone.
26 votes -
Scores of papers by Eliezer Masliah, prominent neuroscientist and top NIH official, fall under suspicion
25 votes -
What we know about Covid’s impact on your brain: Scientists are worried that persisting cognitive issues may signal a coming surge of dementia and other mental conditions
36 votes -
How accurate is the conventional wisdom about dopamine?
“Dopamine” has entered cultural conversations as roughly equivalent to “the feel-good brain chemical.” People talk about “dopamine hits” and “dopamine fasts” and “low dopamine.” In a recent...
“Dopamine” has entered cultural conversations as roughly equivalent to “the feel-good brain chemical.” People talk about “dopamine hits” and “dopamine fasts” and “low dopamine.” In a recent conversation a family member talked about starting the day on his phone and scrolling feeds “because I’ve gotta get my dopamine up before work.”
There’s a seemingly widespread understanding that dopamine makes us feel good and that it can be used against us to make us do things we don’t necessarily like (like endlessly scroll feeds).
Is any of this accurate to how dopamine actually works in our brains? It feels like an oversimplification to me, but I don’t actually know.
It also seems odd to me that there’s so much focus on dopamine but not, say, oxytocin or serotonin (unless you’re a Billie Eilish or Girl in Red fan, respectively).
Is our lay understanding of “dopamine” efficient shorthand or pseudoscientific sleight of hand?
21 votes -
Neuralink: PRIME study progress update — second participant
8 votes -
Scientists research man missing 90% of his brain who leads a normal life
27 votes -
The brain makes a lot of waste. Now scientists think they know where it goes (in mice).
20 votes -
New AI project aims to mimic the human neocortex: The Thousand Brains Project offers a fundamentally different approach to AI
19 votes -
Internet addiction affects the behavior and development of adolescents
8 votes -
See the most detailed map of human brain matter ever created
14 votes -
Menthol inhalation may boost cognitive ability in Alzheimer’s
19 votes -
Those who read a lot of fiction shown to have improved cognitive abilities
24 votes -
New products collect data from your brain. Where does it go?
4 votes -
What dying people see in their dreams
7 votes -
Human brains and fruit fly brains are built similarly – visualizing how helps researchers better understand how both work
7 votes -
Researchers map how the brain regulates emotions
1 vote -
Memories are made by breaking DNA — and fixing it (in mice)
19 votes -
Root cause of Alzheimer's may be fat buildup in brain cells, research suggests
22 votes -
Psilocybin therapy alters prefrontal and limbic brain circuitry in alcohol use disorder
17 votes -
Researchers were able to isolate the brain from the rest of the body of a pig, and kept it alive and functioning for five hours
59 votes -
Why we crave – The neuroscientific picture of addiction overlooks the psychological and social factors that make cravings so hard to resist
15 votes -
New study - scent of tears from female humans reduces revenge seeking and aggression in males, similar to patterns observed in other mammals
31 votes -
Machine learning creates a massive map of smelly molecules
14 votes -
CDH2 mutation affecting N-cadherin function causes attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder in humans and mice
19 votes -
Scientists are researching a device that can induce lucid dreams on demand
33 votes -
What causes fainting? Scientists finally have an answer.
22 votes -
Neuralink competitor Precision Neuroscience buys factory to build its brain implants
14 votes -
Growing living rat neurons to play... DOOM?
20 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 -
‘Our ability to forsee the future and review the past predisposes us to mental illness’
17 votes -
Boston University - Study finds CTE in 40% of athletes who died before thirty
15 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 -
Study shows if music gives you chills or goosebumps, you may have a special brain
60 votes -
What is reality? Lisa Feldman Barrett, a neuroscientist explains.
5 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 -
Cat noses contain twisted labyrinths that help them separate smells
13 votes -
ChubbyEmu case study of a victim of unlicensed food truck
14 votes -
Neuroscientists show that brain waves synchronize when people interact
11 votes -
Eastern philosophy says there's no "self". Science agrees
23 votes -
Nanoplastic ingestion causes neurological deficits
8 votes -
Empathy’s influence on drinking patterns
7 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