Inside the body, a 24-hour rhythm, known as the circadian rhythm, quietly coordinates when we sleep, wake, eat and recover.
A new study from Karolinska Institutet, published in Nature Communications, reveals how rhythmic brain waves known as alpha oscillations help us distinguish between our own body and the external world ...
Study shows alpha brain wave frequency shapes how the brain integrates touch and vision to create the feeling that your body ...
A new study from the Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute now shows how human stem cell based therapy may help ...
The world’s most powerful supercomputers can now run simulations of billions of neurons, and researchers hope such models ...
Cognitive decline is natural: it starts to subtly set in by our 40s, and by your mid-50s it’s perfectly normal to find ...
The results revealed that the speed of alpha brain waves in the parietal cortex plays a key role. This region of the brain ...
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