Contributors
May 1, 2012
Meet some of the people featured in the April 2012 issue of The Scientist.
May 1, 2012
Meet some of the people featured in the April 2012 issue of The Scientist.
Being an ex-drug-addict turned neuroscientist brings a unique insight into the physiological and phenomenological realities of addiction.
A completely colorblind musician and painter perceives the world in a new way with help from technology.
A population of neurons in pigeon brains encodes direction, intensity, and polarity of the Earth’s magnetic field.
A judicial technicality may decide the fate of NIH-funded human embryonic stem cell research.
Progenitor cells discovered in the brain’s small blood vessels have the capacity to differentiate into neurons and other tissue types.
Science adviser John Holdren speaks out about how the Presidential Administration is handling the controversial research that rendered avian flu transmissible between ferrets.
A new system decodes brain signals from the motor cortex of monkeys and translates them into basic arm movements, despite temporary paralysis.
Researchers weaken the memories of drug use in recovering addicts.
Baboons are able to distinguish printed English words from nonsense sequences of letters—the first step in the reading process.