
In Search of the Brain’s Social Road Maps
Neural circuits that track our whereabouts in space and time may also play vital roles in determining how we relate to other people
Daniela Schiller is a professor of both neuroscience and psychiatry at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. She researches the neural mechanisms underlying emotional control needed to adapt to constantly changing environments.

In Search of the Brain’s Social Road Maps
Neural circuits that track our whereabouts in space and time may also play vital roles in determining how we relate to other people

Falling Walls: Social Relationships as a Spatial Problem
The hippocampus appears to keep track of social dynamics just as it tracks us moving physically through real spaces

How Free Is Your Will?
A clock face, advanced neurosurgery--and startling philosophical questions about the decision to act

Snakes in the MRI Machine: A Study of Courage
What courage looks like in the brain--in real time