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5 votes
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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 heat affects the mind
12 votes -
Microplastics are infiltrating brain tissue, studies show
51 votes -
Neuralink: PRIME study progress update — second participant
8 votes -
The brain makes a lot of waste. Now scientists think they know where it goes (in mice).
20 votes -
Researchers at Lund University in Sweden have successfully implanted seven million lab-grown brain cells into a patient to treat Parkinson's disease
23 votes -
Potential ties between quaternary ammonia and brain cell damage
6 votes -
Concussion treatment: the insidious myth about resting protocols that even doctors still believe
22 votes -
The great rewiring: is social media really behind an epidemic of teenage mental illness?
28 votes -
Root cause of Alzheimer's may be fat buildup in brain cells, research suggests
22 votes -
NIH studies find severe symptoms of “Havana Syndrome,” but no evidence of MRI-detectable brain injury or biological abnormalities
18 votes -
Maine mass shooter had traumatic brain injury, scan shows
18 votes -
The growing link between microbes, mood and mental health
22 votes -
Elon Musk's Neuralink implants brain chip in first human
35 votes -
Scientists document first-ever transmitted Alzheimer’s cases, tied to no-longer-used medical procedure
28 votes -
Psychoactive drug ibogaine effectively treats traumatic brain injury in special ops military vets
31 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 -
ChubbyEmu case study of a victim of unlicensed food truck
14 votes -
Soft ‘e-skin’ generates nerve-like impulses that talk to the brain
8 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 -
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 -
How to unlearn a disease
6 votes -
I know the secret to the quiet mind. I wish I’d never learned It.
18 votes -
Real-time tracking of serotonin, dopamine opens new window to the brain
4 votes -
Coronavirus isolation affects your brain — a neuroscientist explains how, and what to do about it
Social media makes it possible for us socialise far and wide. Reach out to friends online, call your parents, and learn how to practice mindfulness or meditation. Head to the backyard for a dose...
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Social media makes it possible for us socialise far and wide. Reach out to friends online, call your parents, and learn how to practice mindfulness or meditation.
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Head to the backyard for a dose of nature, or if you're in an apartment with no nature to gaze at, be sure to get to a green space for your exercise.
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To help improve your sleep, try sticking to a routine and avoid screen time for at least an hour before bed. And lay off the alcohol – it reduces the quality of your sleep.
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Just 10 minutes of exercise may improve our attention for the following two to four hours, so if you're struggling to focus, get that blood pumping.
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Give your isolation brain a boost by laying off the high-sugar or high-fat treats. Have healthy snacks on hand instead, like fruit, vegetables and nuts.
6 votes -
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No wonder coronavirus isolation is so tiring. All those extra, tiny decisions are taxing our brains.
10 votes -
Acclaimed scientist gets brain surgery for alcohol addiction
18 votes -
Longevity linked to proteins that calm overexcited neurons
5 votes -
Parkinson's disease-causing protein hijacks gut-brain axis
8 votes -
How the brain shapes pain and links ouch with emotion
3 votes -
The night the lights went out
8 votes -
Rare protein allergy would give PKU sufferer 'brain damage'
5 votes -
Not dead but gone: How a concussion changed my girlfriend's personality forever
21 votes -
Not all sleep is equal when it comes to cleaning the brain
16 votes -
Scientists find a brain circuit that could explain seasonal depression
6 votes -
A man's love of squirrel meat might have given him a horrifying, fatal brain disease
9 votes -
The bang on the head that knocked English out of me
14 votes -
Brain volume may be tied to emotionally protective traits
6 votes -
It’s not all in your mind: How meditation affects the brain to help you stress less
8 votes -
Right after a period, women have better spatial awareness. Three weeks after, verbal skills peak. It turns out the monthly cycle does change the brain – but not in the ways you think.
10 votes -
How dropping the 'brain death' requirement has boosted organ donations in Alberta
4 votes -
Mobile phone radiation may affect memory performance in adolescents, study finds
3 votes