Scientists are using genetic techniques to target diseases that affect how we see, hear, smell, taste, and feel.
Scientists are using genetic techniques to target diseases that affect how we see, hear, smell, taste, and feel.
Researchers demonstrate that brain activity in response to a decision-making challenge predicts the likelihood that released prisoners will be re-arrested.
T-cells engineered to attack B-cells sent adults’ acute leukemia into remission.
Researchers identify a protein involved in the chromosomal disorder that could explain its characteristic learning deficits.
Researchers find that temporary double-stranded DNA breaks commonly result from normal neuron activation—but expression of an Alzheimer’s-linked protein increases the damage.
Improvements in light-sheet microscopy enable real-time activity imaging of almost every neuron in the brain of zebrafish larvae.
Mice with human brain cells showed enhanced synaptic plasticity and learning, suggesting glia may be key to our cognitive prowess.
Normal proteins with regions resembling disease-causing prions are responsible for an inherited disorder that affects the brain, muscle, and bone.
The method to the dengue virus's maddening infectiousness.
Inducing certain brain patterns extends non-REM sleep in mice.