
Mirror Neurons Can Reflect Hatred
Mirror neurons distinguish between those we like and those we do not
Mirror neurons distinguish between those we like and those we do not
Circadian rhythms tell fowl to crow at dawn, even if the birds can't see the sun come up. Sophie Bushwick reports
Long-sought specificity on the shapes of serotonin binding sites could aid in the discovery of new drugs to combat depression as well as in the study of consciousness
Trial subjects who ate olive oil versus other kinds of fats felt fuller and had higher blood levels of serotonin. Christopher Intagliata reports
New research clarifies why music and exercise make such a good team, and how to create an optimal workout playlist
, via Wikimedia Commons"] By Florian Thillmann (de:Benutzer:Flothi) (own work / selbst fotografiert) [CC-BY-SA-2.5 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5) “ Once the preparations were complete, I was able to place each of my hands on a nest of knobs and levers and control a pair of manipulators situated behind my head, and use the periscope to see what they worked on...
FMRI scans of volunteers' media prefrontal cortexes revealed unique brain activity patterns associated with individual characters or personalities as subjects thought about them
Books and recommendations from Scientific American MIND
Agreeable personalities produce more of the brain's natural painkillers
Doctors in medieval Europe weren't as idle as it may seem, as a new analysis of the oldest-known preserved human dissection in Europe reveals
With the president suggesting a multibillion-dollar neuroscience effort, a leading neuroscientist explains the deep conceptual problems with plans to record all the brain's neurons
Genetically engineered mice that can't feel cold are a step toward drugs that dull pain without numbness. Karen Hopkin reports
Researchers have found that people who study languages tend to show significant growth in certain areas of the brain. Christie Nicholson reports
Recent research has changed the way clinicians treat hoarding as well as refuted popular assumptions about people with excessive clutter
When not misfolded, prions lend a hand in formation neuronal connections
Hallucinations, heart problems and seizures also tied to illegal drug
A brain prosthesis gives the rodents a sixth sense—an ability to "see" in the infrared
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