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A Brain Pacemaker for Alzheimer’s Disease?

As many of you know, Alzheimer’s is an absolutely devastating neurodegenerative disease. It destroys the lives of loved ones with the disease, takes a terrible toll on family and friends who care for...

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Mice Learn Better with Help from Human Brain Cells

Human astrocytes in a mouse brainSource: Steven Goldman, M.D., Ph.D., University of Rochester Medical Center What happens when you implant human glia—a type of brain cell that protects and nurtures...

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Creative Minds: Lighting Up Memory

One of the most debilitating, and heartbreaking, consequences of Alzheimer’s disease is the way it slowly robs people of their memories. Unfortunately, we don’t yet have a cure for Alzheimer’s, let...

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Can Something in Young Blood Give a Boost to Old Brains?

Infusing blood from younger creatures into older ones in hopes of halting—or even reversing—the aging process may sound like a macabre scene straight out of “Game of Thrones.” However, several...

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Neuroscience: The Power of Curiosity to Inspire Learning

When our curiosity is piqued, learning can be a snap and recalling the new information comes effortlessly. But when it comes to things we don’t care about—the recipe to that “delicious” holiday...

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NIH-Funded Research Makes Science’s “Top 10” List

Modeled after Time’s Person of the Year, the journal Science has a tradition of honoring the year’s most groundbreaking research advances. For 2014, the European Space Agency nabbed first place with...

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Making the Connections: Study Links Brain’s Wiring to Human Traits

Caption: The wiring diagram of a human brain, measured in a healthy individual, where the movement of water molecules is measured by diffuse tensor magnetic resonance imaging, revealing the...

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Alzheimer’s Disease: Tau Protein Predicts Early Memory Loss

Caption: PET scan images show distribution of tau (top panel) and beta-amyloid (bottom panel) across a brain with early Alzheimer’s disease. Red indicates highest levels of protein binding, dark blue...

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Exercise Releases Brain-Healthy Protein

We all know that exercise is important for a strong and healthy body. Less appreciated is that exercise seems also to be important for a strong and healthy mind, boosting memory and learning, while...

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Creative Minds: Helping More Kids Beat Anxiety Disorders

Dylan Gee While earning her Ph.D. in clinical psychology, Dylan Gee often encountered children and adolescents battling phobias, panic attacks, and other anxiety disorders. Most overcame them with the...

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How Sleep Resets the Brain

Caption: Colorized 3D reconstruction of dendrites. Neurons receive input from other neurons through synapses, most of which are located along the dendrites on tiny projections called spines. Credit:...

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Aging Research: Plasma Protein Revitalizes the Brain

For centuries, people have yearned for an elixir capable of restoring youth to their aging bodies and minds. It sounds like pure fantasy, but, in recent years, researchers have shown that the blood of...

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Creative Minds: Seeing Memories in a New Light

Steve Ramirez/Joshua Sariñana Whether it’s lacing up for a morning run, eating blueberry scones, or cheering on the New England Patriots, Steve Ramirez loves life and just about everything in it. As an...

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New Evidence Suggests Aging Brains Continue to Make New Neurons

Caption: Mammalian hippocampal tissue. Immunofluorescence microscopy showing neurons (blue) interacting with neural astrocytes (red) and oligodendrocytes (green).Credit: Jonathan Cohen, Fields Lab,...

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Unlocking the Brain’s Memory Retrieval System

Credit:Sahay Lab, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston Play the first few bars of any widely known piece of music, be it The Star-Spangled Banner, Beethoven’s Fifth, or The Rolling Stones’ (I Can’t...

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Study Suggests Light Exercise Helps Memory

Credit: iStock/Wavebreakmedia How much exercise does it take to boost your memory skills? Possibly a lot less than you’d think, according to the results of a new study that examined the impact of light...

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A New Piece of the Alzheimer’s Puzzle

Credit: National Institute on Aging, NIH For the past few decades, researchers have been busy uncovering genetic variants associated with an increased risk of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) [1]. But there’s...

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Distinctive Brain ‘Subnetwork’ Tied to Feeling Blue

Credit: :iStock/kieferpix Experiencing a range of emotions is a normal part of human life, but much remains to be discovered about the neuroscience of mood. In a step toward unraveling some of those...

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‘Exercise Hormone’ Tied to Bone-Strengthening Benefits

Credit: gettyimages/kali9 There’s no doubt that exercise is good for us—strengthening our muscles, helping us maintain a healthy weight, maybe even boosting our moods and memories. There’s also been...

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Sleep Loss Encourages Spread of Toxic Alzheimer’s Protein

Credit: iStock/bowdenimages In addition to memory loss and confusion, many people with Alzheimer’s disease have trouble sleeping. Now an NIH-funded team of researchers has evidence that the reverse is...

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