Education

Trust And Communication Can Help “Helicopter Parents” Land Safely

Known as “helicopter parents” for the way they hover around their children’s lives, are those parents that monitor their children’s behavior obsessively, looking for any chance of problems or issues. Many studies have likened parental engagement in a child’s education with better grades, less substance abuse, and increase

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Our Musical Birdbrains: Why Do Birds (And Humans) Sing?

Birds are perhaps the most admired of creatures in the animal kingdom. Their beautiful plumage dazzles the eye, and their ability to fly evokes a sense of awe. They have been the subject of innumerable poems and have appeared in the art of virtually every culture since the earliest cave paintings

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Lighting Up The Brain with SPECT

Physicians who evaluate patients with abnormal behavior have access to new technologies that provide functional images of the brain. These images provide new insight into the nature of their disorders, and contribute to the decisions leading to appropriate treatment. Brain SPECT

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How Climate Change Affects Our Brains

Call it what you want — global warming or climate change — but we can all agree that it isn’t beneficial for anyone. In fact, the latest studies are beginning to show just how much of an impact climate change has had in the past, is currently having, and may have on the way human beings evolve in the future.

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Happiness from a Parent’s Perspective

Most of us can recall, as children, waiting anxiously for a promised treat from a parent or grandparent. The classic 1972 experiment by Walter Mischel of Stanford University found that only one-third of children were able to delay for 15 minutes eating a single marshmallow, while left alone with it

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Games for Health: Exploring How Video Games Can Improve Health and Health Care

The Games for Health Project was founded in 2004 and sponsored by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Games for Health has been bringing together game designers and developers, medical professionals, researchers, and others for the Annual Games for Health Conference to share and discuss

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The Art of Tasting: Your Brain on Wine

There is no beverage in the world that holds as much mystery, flavor, texture, color, and history as wine. It is a drink that has traveled through both space and time — from the dark, dank caves near a small Armenian village where it was being dedicated to the dead and pressed for the first time

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Food Doesn’t Have to Look “Perfect” to Eat

Even though most of us might not prefer to identify as dedicated grocery shoppers, we have clear preferences when it comes to choosing the produce from the display: We do not go for the ugly ones.

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Broadcasting The Breakthroughs: An Interview with Dr. Max Gomez

Dr. Max Gomez, better known to viewers as “Dr. Max,” the medical correspondent on WCBS-TV in New York, has enjoyed a long and prolific career as a science educator. His new book, “Cells Are the New Cure: The Cutting-Edge Medical Breakthroughs That Are Transforming Our Health,” is co-written with Robin Smith.

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The “Tortured” Artist: Examining Creativity and Mental Illness

The image of the “tortured artist” is one that is easily recognized and has been around for thousands of years, solidifying in the minds of many that in order to be truly creative one must be touched by mental affliction. The idea is so persistent that numerous books and films have been made

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Light At The End of the Tunnel: Searching for the Cause and Cure of MS

In Terry Mapes’ article “Searching for the Cause and Cure of MS” focused on the Tisch MS Research Center of New York and its annual free patient symposium. Several months later, the institution was granted what is very likely North America’s first FDA-approved stem-cell trial. It is considered

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Stuttering: A Neurobiological Breakdown of Speech Fluidity

Imagine if a seemingly innocuous thought — such as the notion of speaking — triggered a response that left you in fear of all social situations. Now imagine it initiating a chain reaction which caused tension in the jaw, involuntary muscle movement, and increased heart rate, and brought on bouts of anxiety that exacerbated your inability

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The Chicken or the Egg: Language or Thought?

Is English turning into Newspeak? In George Orwell’s dystopian novel “Nineteen Eighty-Four,” Newspeak was Oceania’s obtuse language that conveyed a meaning opposite of its words and promised to eradicate freedom and independent thought in the future. “How could you have a slogan …”

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Know Your Brain: The Hippocampus — Your Brain’s GPS

It’s long been known that the hippocampus, a structure of the brain located in the medial temporal lobe, is responsible for spacial navigation and memory. In the past, some researchers have thought that it encodes the distance to the goal as the crow flies, the Euclidean straight line while others have thought that it maps

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Down and Out and Going to School

Teachers in schools with students living in prolonged poverty often get frustrated. In areas where a majority of students live in poverty, teachers often complain about students’ chronic tardiness, the high rate of absenteeism, lack of motivation to study, low academic achievement, disruptive

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A magazine dedicated to the brain.

We believe that neuroscience is the next great scientific frontier, and that advances in understanding the nature of the brain, consciousness, behavior, and health will transform human life in this century.

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