A new device for directing fluids is designed to deliver chemical cues directly to petri dishes without disturbing cells.
A new device for directing fluids is designed to deliver chemical cues directly to petri dishes without disturbing cells.
Read about beginnings of neuroscience through the eyes of Nobel Prize winner Eric Kandel, and how researchers today envision the future of the field.
To the great scientific leaps witnessed during our first 25 years, and the game changers yet to come.
As neuroscientists look to the future of their field, they are beginning to delve into more complex factors that define our emotions and intentions.
Epigenetic perturbations could jump-start heritable variation.
Researchers studying differences in how individuals respond to stress are finding that genes are malleable and environments can be deterministic.
In an essay entitled "Nurture, Nature, and the Stress That is Life," neurobiologists Darlene Francis and Daniela Kaufer envision a future where science moves past the nature vs. nurture debate in considering differences in human behavioral responses to stress.
Considered a renegade by his peers, Nobel Prize-winner Eric Kandel used a simple model to probe the neural circuitry of memory.
Dried plant specimens reveal the origin of an insect pest that has spread throughout Europe.
Eric Kandel, winner of the 2000 Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine for his work on signal transduction in the nervous system, chats about the ever-changing field of neuroscience, funding, his students, and what he hopes science will accomplish.