Read about beginnings of neuroscience through the eyes of Nobel Prize winner Eric Kandel, and how researchers today envision the future of the field.
Read about beginnings of neuroscience through the eyes of Nobel Prize winner Eric Kandel, and how researchers today envision the future of the field.
A snapshot of the most highly ranked articles in microbiology and related areas, from Faculty of 1000
A new study raises further doubts about the ability of proteins called sirtuins to slow aging, but the controversy remains unsettled.
A snapshot of the most highly ranked articles in aging research and related areas, from Faculty of 1000
What does a normally aging brain look like? Are diseases of aging such as Alzheimer’s inevitable?
Looking for a more realistic way to study memory, we turned to place cells—a network of cells that record a rat’s memory of an environment. Each place cell would fire only when the rat was in one particular location in space, creating a map as the
Long-term potentiation (LTP), discovered in the 1970s, was later shown to be the molecular basis of memory. Since many diseases of aging affect memory, could memory formation and storage be altered by the same mechanisms in normal aging and diseased
Early on, researchers had learned that the hippocampus was the structure in the brain where long-term memories were created and stored, but it was not known whether the different cell types within this structure might be more or less susceptible to t
September 1, 2011
Meet some of the people featured in the September 2011 issue of The Scientist.
In the memory circuits of the aging brain and the signaling pathways of pain, science is trading mystery for mastery.