FeaturedPsychology·December 27, 2016·4 min readHow the Brain Processes Faces From Sight to RecognitionA new study explores the neural basis for facial recognition and identification.Read More
FeaturedNeuroscienceOpen Neuroscience Articles·October 3, 2016·4 min readDopamine Connected to Facial RecognitionA new neuroimaging study has uncovered a link between dopamine and facial recognition.Read More
FeaturedNeuroscienceNeuroscience VideosOpen Neuroscience Articles·July 21, 2016·4 min readHow Words Are Represented in the BrainA new study sheds light on the neurobiology of reading.Read More
FeaturedNeuroscience·July 20, 2016·3 min readHow Our Brain Puts the World in OrderA new study identifies different brain regions that become active when a strategy of categorization is applied.Read More
FeaturedNeuroscience·July 12, 2016·4 min readMiddle Age Memory Decline a Matter of Changing FocusMemory decline that starts during middle age may be the result of changes in what information the brain focuses on when forming and retrieving memories.Read More
FeaturedNeuroscience·December 29, 2015·2 min readSpectre-acular Fail: Bond Villain Gets His Neuroanatomy WrongAccording to researchers, Bond villain Biofeld doesn't have a good grasp of neuroanatomy.Read More
FeaturedOpen Neuroscience ArticlesPsychology·October 3, 2014·6 min readStudy Suggests Neurobiological Basis of Human-Pet RelationshipA neuroimaging study looks at how closely the human-pet relationship mirrors the mother-child bond.Read More
AutismFeatured·March 18, 2013·4 min readDifficulty in Recognizing Faces in Autism Linked to Performance in a Group of NeuronsNeurons in the specific brain area responsible for processing faces are too broadly "tuned" in some patients with autism, leading to difficulties in discriminating between the facial features of different individuals, a new study suggests.Read More