Neuroscience
- 			 Neuroscience NeuroscienceParents’ presence promotes a child’s pluckParents’ presence or absence during a learning exercise determines whether their child is fearful later, or willing to explore. 
- 			 Neuroscience NeuroscienceWhen tickling the brain to stimulate memory, location mattersConflicting results regarding the benefits of brain stimulation may be explained by the precise location of electrodes. 
- 			 Neuroscience NeuroscienceBrain waves may focus attention and keep information flowingNot just by-products of busy nerve cells, brain waves may be key to how the brain operates. 
- 			 Neuroscience NeuroscienceHow biology breaks the ‘cerebral mystique’The Biological Mind rejects the idea of the brain as the lone organ that makes us who we are. Our body and environment also factor in, Alan Jasanoff says. 
- 			 Neuroscience NeuroscienceDepression among new mothers is finally getting some attentionScientists search new mothers’ minds for clues to postpartum depression. By Laura Beil
- 			 Neuroscience NeuroscienceReaders muse about memory, magnetic monopoles and moreReaders had questions about the physical trace of memory, magnetic monopoles, blowflies and more. 
- 			 Neuroscience NeuroscienceThe debate over how long our brains keep making new nerve cells heats upAdult humans don’t have newborn nerve cells in a memory-related part of the brain, a controversial paper suggests. 
- 			 Neuroscience NeuroscienceSome flu strains can make mice forgetfulMice infected with influenza had memory problems a month later, a result that hints at a link between infections and brain performance. 
- 			 Neuroscience NeuroscienceBabies can recover language skills after a left-side strokeVery young babies who have strokes in the language centers of their brain can recover normal language function — in the other side of their brain. 
- 			 Neuroscience NeuroscienceTo hear the beat, your brain may think about moving to itTo keep time to a song, the brain relies on a region used to plan movement — even when you’re not tapping along. By Dan Garisto
- 			 Health & Medicine Health & MedicineCutting off a brain enzyme reversed Alzheimer’s plaques in miceInhibiting an enzyme involved in the production of Alzheimer’s protein globs also made old globs, or plaques, disappear in mouse brains. 
- 			 Neuroscience NeuroscienceThe wiring for walking developed long before fish left the seaThese strange walking fish might teach us about the evolutionary origins of our own ability to walk. By Dan Garisto