Neuroscience
- 			 Neuroscience NeuroscienceMelatonin and the watery beginnings of sleepThe tiny zooplankton Platynereis dumerilii use melatonin just as much as we do, suggesting that the origins of sleeplike behavior may lie under the sea. 
- 			 Neuroscience NeuroscienceNeuroscientists garner Nobel for discovering brain’s ‘inner GPS’Three researchers who found brain cells that allow rats to orient themselves in space have won the 2014 Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine. 
- 			 Neuroscience NeuroscienceBrain’s map cells win three scientists Nobel PrizeThe discovery of brain cells that provide a sort of “inner GPS” has been awarded the 2014 Nobel Prize for physiology or medicine. 
- 			 Neuroscience NeuroscienceHigh blood sugar could worsen effects of spinal injuryStudies in people and mice suggest reining in blood sugar can improve recovery from a spinal cord injury. By Nathan Seppa
- 			 Neuroscience NeuroscienceWhite House gives progress report on BRAIN InitiativeMore pieces of President Obama’s ambitious BRAIN Initiative announced April 2013 have fallen into place. 
- 			 Neuroscience NeuroscienceMighty muscles may stave off depressionStrong muscles protect the brain from stress-induced toxin associated with depression, a study in mice suggests. 
- 			 Psychology PsychologyBalancing the excitation and inhibition tightrope in depressionA new study looks at how a balance of positive and negative inputs in the lateral habenula might relate to disappointment and depression. 
- 			 Neuroscience NeuroscienceDyslexic brain may solve some math problems in a roundabout wayChildren with dyslexia rely heavily on right brain to do addition problems. 
- 			 Psychology PsychologyTraining the overweight brain to abstainA new study shows that brain changes are associated with a weight-loss behavioral intervention, but it may be a while before we can train our brains to prefer peppers over pork chops. 
- 			 Psychology PsychologyIn PTSD, a good night’s sleep means feeling safeStudies of PTSD in rats have usually focused on fear and trauma. But a new study in humans shows that learning about safety may be important as well. 
- 			 Neuroscience NeuroscienceOur brains sort words as we sleepEven after nodding off, a person’s brain correctly sorts words into categories, adding to the achievements of the sleeping brain. 
- 			 Neuroscience NeuroscienceTo study attention, pay attention to batsStudying how bats’ brains find prey using echolocation could have implications for the way human brains pay attention.