A new study suggests that how neurons process energy may determine whether they resist damage or begin to break down.
Morning Overview on MSN
Alzheimer’s mice regain full function after metabolic reset, scientists say
For decades, Alzheimer’s research has largely focused on slowing decline, not restoring what was lost. Now a series of animal ...
Morning Overview on MSN
New clue explains how some injured neurons resist decline
Neurons are famously fragile, yet some injured cells manage to hang on, stabilize, and even reconnect. That quiet resilience ...
In humans and several other mammals, brain cells are distributed according to a fundamental mathematical pattern, which could help researchers make better models of the brain in the future. When you ...
Your brain can still make new neurons when you’re an adult. But how does the rare birth of these new neurons contribute to cognitive function? Researchers know that new neurons contribute to memory ...
Researchers have created a protein that can detect the faint chemical signals neurons receive from other brain cells. By ...
The human brain contains nearly 86 billion neurons, constantly exchanging messages like an immense social media network, but neurons do not work alone – glial cells, neurotransmitters, receptors, and ...
Using microfluidic devices mimicking the crowded spaces in the developing brain, researchers gained novel insights into distinct modes of locomotion found in neurons. In the developing brain, neurons ...
New research has identified a key step in how neurons encode information on timescales that match learning. New research from the Max Planck Florida Institute for Neuroscience published this week in ...
Your brain is constantly evolving. Throughout your life, it reshapes, adjusts, and grows stronger in response to learning, new experiences, and your habits. This amazing shape-shifting ability is ...
There is a strong link between regular physical exercise and good brain health, according to one study. Researchers found ...
New research from the Max Planck Florida Institute for Neuroscience published this week in Nature has identified a key step in how neurons encode information on timescales that match learning.
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