Contributors
August 1, 2011
Meet some of the people featured in the August 2011 issue of The Scientist.
August 1, 2011
Meet some of the people featured in the August 2011 issue of The Scientist.
A UK parliamentary panel says peer review is still valuable, but should be supplemented by open review processes, preprint servers, and online repositories.
Unlike human brains, chimpanzee brains don’t get smaller as they age, suggesting that pronounced neurological decline is a uniquely human byproduct of our oversized brains and extreme longevity.
Eleanor Simpson, a neuroscientist at Columbia University Medical Center, discusses a recent Nature paper that probes dopamine's role in helping animals make positive associations to stimuli that herald pleasurable outcomes (such as the handing out of food).
The neural nexus of the circadian clock shows signs of functional decline as mice age, providing clues as to why sleep patterns tend to change as people grow older.
Researchers find that an ingredient in common cough medicine improves multiple sclerosis symptoms in animal models.
The Royal Society's annual science extravaganza packs some interesting stuff into 5 days of love and research.
Particulates in the air can cause impaired learning and depression in mice.
A certain type of neural precursor does it all—replaces itself, differentiates into specialized brain cells, and multiplies into more stem-cell-like cells.
Love can buffer people from pain by invoking feelings of safety and reassurance.