A new study reports small fragments of the rabies virus binds to, and inhibits, nicotinic acetylcholine receptors in the brain, inducing frenzied behaviors.
Researchers use rabies viruses to see how well transplanted neural cells have connected to neural network in the brains of mice.
Researchers have developed a new reagent that is able to map neural networks 20 times more efficiently than their previous versions.
Researchers use a neutered strain of the rabies virus to map brain activity in real time.