Neuroscience

  1. Neuroscience

    Pain curbs sex drive in females, but not males

    When in pain, female mice’s interest in sex takes a hit but males still want to mate.

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  2. Neuroscience

    Bingeing rats show the power of food habits

    Rats allowed to binge on sweetened milk show a bad habit for food. But while food might change our habits, a bad food habit may not necessarily be an addiction.

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  3. Life

    Insulating sheath on nerve cells isn’t an even coat

    Myelin doesn't evenly coat axons, a finding that runs counter to what scientists suspected.

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  4. Neuroscience

    Poor slumber is bad for young flies’ brains

    A child's sleep deprivation could alter brain development and adult behavior, a study of fruit flies suggests.

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  5. Neuroscience

    Even with rest, brain changes linked to football linger

    The offseason may not allow enough time for football players' brains to heal from hard hits.

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  6. Neuroscience

    What’s behind rising autism rates

    Better diagnosis may be driving a recent spike in autism.

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  7. Neuroscience

    Smell wiring gets set early

    Mess with a baby mouse’s olfaction for too long and neurons never recover.

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  8. Humans

    Father’s obesity linked to autism in children

    A father-to-be’s body mass may be a greater risk factor for his child’s development of autism than the body mass of the mother.

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  9. Neuroscience

    Paralyzed mouse legs move with burst of light

    Neural patch makes leg muscles twitch in paralyzed mice when blue light shines.

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  10. Neuroscience

    Brain’s growth, networks unveiled in new maps

    Two large-scale efforts describe human and mouse brains in detail.

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  11. Neuroscience

    Lost sleep could mean lost neurons

    A new study shows we may not be able to make up for chronic sleep deprivation. The protein SirT3 might protect us against late nights, but all-nighters may produce neuron loss.

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  12. Psychology

    Twenty-two emotions are written on our faces

    People’s faces express at least 22 feelings – far more than the six emotions scientists previously recognized.

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