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Sleep and exercise may curb heart risk from mutant white blood cells

Healthy sleep and regular exercise can work to counteract genetic mutations in white blood cells that are associated with cardiovascular disease and are most common among older people, Mount Sinai researchers have found. In a study published in Nature, the team reported for the first time that sufficient sleep and exercise can help reduce the cancer-like cell expansion and atherosclerotic risk linked to mutations that spontaneously occur in white blood cells.

These mutations accumulate over our lifetimes and occur most often in hematopoietic stem cells, which are the cells in bone marrow that make blood cells, including macrophages and monocytes, immune cells that help defend the body. When these cells develop mutations, they start to proliferate, multiplying faster than they should, and become more inflammatory, irritating or damaging tissues in the body.

This condition, known as clonal hematopoiesis (CH), is detectable in a quarter of people over age 70 and half of people over 80, the researchers say, though it is infrequent in young, healthy people.

Frontiers: For nearly a decade, the idea that ‘the body keeps the score’ has shaped public and clinical understanding of trauma (van der Kolk, 2014)

It is an enticing metaphor—implying that experience is literally inscribed in flesh, that the body bears the scars of what the mind cannot face. Yet recent advances in computational and systems neuroscience reveal that this image, while emotionally compelling, is biologically inaccurate. The body proper does not store trauma; the brain dynamically reenacts it through maladaptive inference. What endures after trauma is not a memory lodged in non-innervated tissue but a collapse of flexibility—a loss of metastability, the brain’s ability to fluidly switch among semi-stable network states.

In computational terms, trauma over-weights the precision of danger priors: the brain assigns excessive confidence to threat predictions, constraining inference based on the prior premise of enduring danger. The result is hypervigilance, flashbacks, and avoidance—symptoms of a system caught in self-confirming predictions. Mathematically, this overconfidence means one cannot escape local minima—in a free energy landscape—that become deeply and precisely engrained (i.e., trapped in a ravine with steep sides, where precision corresponds to the local curvature or steepness).

This rigidity contrasts with a healthy brain’s metastable dynamics, where neuronal networks continually integrate and segregate in response to context. This allows neuronal dynamics to explore multiple (unstable) interpretations of the world. Hellyer and colleagues demonstrated that metastability is a hallmark of cognitive flexibility: the capacity for neural coalitions to assemble transiently and adapt quickly. Using both empirical and computational approaches, Hellyer et al. (2015) showed that reduced metastability arising from damage to the structural connectome was associated with diminished cognitive flexibility and impaired information processing. Trauma erodes this fluidity, trapping the brain in narrow basins of fear and defensive salience. To restore mental health is not about ‘releasing’ stored emotion but reestablishing dynamic equilibrium enabling the brain’s ability to move with graceful agility over a landscape of beliefs, commitments and intentions.

Third electrode pair can sharpen deep brain stimulation technique, mouse experiments suggest

A study by UNIGE, in collaboration with ETH Zurich, has significantly improved the accuracy of a noninvasive brain stimulation technique, paving the way for its use in the treatment of neurological and psychiatric disorders.

Brain stimulation techniques can correct abnormal activity in the neural circuits involved in conditions such as Parkinson’s disease and depression. However, current transcranial stimulation methods delivered through the scalp reach only the brain’s surface, limiting their effectiveness. Deep brain stimulation, on the other hand, can target deeper structures but requires surgical implantation of electrodes.

A team from the Synapsy Center for Neuroscience and Mental Health Research at the University of Geneva (UNIGE), in collaboration with ETH Zurich, the Wyss Center Geneva and EPFL, has improved a promising intermediate technology called “temporal interference stimulation.” This method could allow deeper and more targeted noninvasive brain stimulation. The study is published in Cell Systems.

China Just Beat Elon Musk With A Chip Inside The Human Brain

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A major new development in brain-computer technology is raising eyebrows across the tech world. While Elon Musk’s Neuralink has dominated headlines for years, a breakthrough emerging from China is now sparking fresh debate about who is really leading the race to connect the human brain with advanced computing systems.

In this video, we take a closer look at the latest brain-chip innovation, what makes it different from existing neural interface projects, and why experts are paying close attention. As competition intensifies between global technology powers, advances in neural implants could reshape medicine, communication, and even the future relationship between humans and machines.

Could this new achievement challenge Neuralink’s position at the center of the brain-tech conversation? And what does it mean for the future of artificial intelligence, neuroscience, and human enhancement? The implications may be far bigger than many people realize.

Organoid Intelligence | Dr. Thomas Hartung | XPANSE 2024

Delve into the fascinating world of organoid intelligence at XPANSE 2024 in Abu Dhabi. Presented by Dr. Thomas Hartung, Professor of Medical Microbiology at Johns Hopkins University, this session explores the cutting-edge research and potential of lab-grown organoids to revolutionize computing, medicine, and neuroscience.

XPANSE, the world’s first visioning of the future with exponential technologies, is an Abu Dhabi-based global initiative and an invitation-only forum for exponential technology. XPANSE 2024, hosted by ADQ, convened 3,000 world’s brightest minds, technology trailblazers, Nobel Laureates, industry leaders, CEOs, ministers and scientists to set the horizons of exponential technologies spanning quantum, genomics, exotic computing, embodied intelligence, next-gen 2D matter, AGI, Brain-Machine Interfaces, Future G and beyond.

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New Discoveries Challenge Everything We Knew About Brain Evolution

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Hello and welcome! My name is Anton and in this video, we will talk about a few studies that explain how the human brain developed complexity.
Links:
https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retri
Other videos:
• Surprise Evidence That Gut Microbes Direct…
• Mindblowing Discoveries About Bacteria Liv…
• Direct Connection Between Gut Microbiome a…
#brain #biology #evolution.

0:00 Discoveries about the evolution of the brain.
1:20 800 Million years ago… how it all began.
3:10 Did nervous system evolve multiple times? Comb jellies.
4:45 Big brains — primates vs octopuses.
9:20 Human brains and human intelligence genes.
11:20 Gut microbes and fuel for the brain.
12:20 Conclusions and implications.

Enjoy and please subscribe.

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The Past, Present, & Future of Brain-Computer Interfaces By Rolando Masís-Obando

In brief: A historical look into how brain computer interfaces have transformed over the past few decades: the landmark research of the past, the landmark research of today, and how it’s going to transform the future of XR. As a neuroscientist for about a decade, my work has focused on how people represent spatial contexts, concepts, and events. I have been able to place people in VR experiences and then through the use of neuroimaging and AI methods untangle their thoughts and how those thoughts influenced what they remember. As this neuroimaging technology reduces in form-factor and increases in accessibility, we can no longer turn a blind-eye to how it may be used nefariously in consumer products. In this talk, I will describe how Brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) have been defined over the years, how research in this field has catapulted, an overview of the neuroscience behind the technology, the landmark studies of the past and present, use-cases in which XR, robotics, prosthetics and BCI have intertwined, and how new AI models are being used to perform mind-reading of both language and mental images. “With great power comes great responsibility” – I will end the talk by describing how and what it means for the future of XR and why it’s important to be careful with this technology, but also how incredibly empowering it can be for the future of XR.

Sugar-coated CAR-T cells survive longer and shrink lymphoma tumors in mice

Scientists at Florida International University may have found a way to make a powerful cancer treatment work even better. The treatment, called CAR-T therapy, uses a patient’s own immune cells to fight cancer. Doctors remove special immune cells called T-cells from the body, genetically change them in a lab so they can recognize cancer, and then put them back into the patient to attack tumors. The therapy has already helped many people with serious blood cancers such as lymphoma and leukemia.

But there is still a problem: Cancer fights back. Tumors create a protective environment around themselves that can weaken or shut down immune cells before they finish destroying the cancer. In many cases, CAR-T cells do not survive long enough to completely wipe out the disease.

Now, FIU researchers say they may have found a way to help.

Scientists found the strength training sweet spot for a longer life

Just 90–120 minutes of strength training a week may deliver some of the biggest long-term health rewards, according to a study tracking more than 147,000 people for 30 years. That amount was linked to lower risks of death overall, particularly from cardiovascular and neurological diseases. Combining strength workouts with aerobic exercise produced even stronger benefits.

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