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Jan 2, 2020

Some learning is a whole-brain affair, study shows

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, food, neuroscience

Researchers at Johns Hopkins Medicine have successfully used a laser-assisted imaging tool to “see” what happens in brain cells of mice learning to reach out and grab a pellet of food. Their experiments, they say, add to evidence that such motor-based learning can occur in multiple areas of the brain, even ones not typically associated with motor control.

“Scientists should be looking at the entire brain to understand specific types of learning,” says Richard Huganir, Ph.D., Bloomberg Distinguished Professor and Director of the Solomon H. Snyder Department of Neuroscience at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. “Different parts of the brain contribute to learning in different ways, and studying brain cell receptors can help us decipher how this works.”

The work, say the researchers, may ultimately inform efforts to develop treatments for learning-based and neurocognitive disorders.

Jan 2, 2020

Neuroscientists Discover New Kind of Signal in the Human Brain

Posted by in categories: computing, neuroscience

Scientists have uncovered a new kind of electrical process in the human brain that could play a key role in the unique way our brains compute.

Our brains are computers that work using a system of connected brain cells, called neurons, that exchange information using chemical and electric signals called action potentials. Researchers have discovered that certain cells in the human cortex, the outer layer of the brain, transmit signals in a way not seen in corresponding rodent cells. This process might be important to better understanding our unique brains and to improving programs that are based on a model of the human brain.

Jan 2, 2020

Study reveals what causes type 2 diabetes and how to reverse it

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, innovation

Breakthrough research shows that type 2 diabetes occurs when fat from the liver overspills into the pancreas and confirms that weight loss can reverse it.

Jan 2, 2020

Novel dementia vaccine on track for human trials within two years

Posted by in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical, neuroscience

A newly published study has described the successful results in mice of a novel vaccine designed to prevent neurodegeneration associated with Alzheimer’s disease. The researchers suggest this “dementia vaccine” is now ready for human trials, and if successful could become the “breakthrough of the next decade.”

The new study, led by the Institute for Molecular Medicine and University of California, Irvine, describes the effect of a vaccine designed to generate antibodies that both prevent, and remove, the aggregation of amyloid and tau proteins in the brain. The accumulation of these two proteins is thought to be the primary pathological cause of neurodegeneration associated with Alzheimer’s disease.

The research revealed the vaccine led to significant decreases in both tau and amyloid accumulation in the brains of bigenic mice engineered to exhibit aggregations of these toxic proteins. Many prior failed Alzheimer’s treatments over the past few years have focused individually on either amyloid or tau protein reductions, but growing evidence suggests a synergistic relationship between the two toxic proteins may be driving neurodegeneration. Hence the hypothesis a combination therapy may be the most effective way to prevent this kind of dementia.

Jan 2, 2020

BWX Technologies, Inc. | People Strong, Innovation Driven

Posted by in categories: government, nuclear energy

NUCLEAR THERMAL PROPULSION


BWX Technologies, Inc. is a leading supplier of nuclear components and fuel to the U.S. government, also providing components and services to the commercial nuclear power industry.

Jan 2, 2020

There’s a Giant Mystery Hiding Inside Every Atom in the Universe

Posted by in categories: particle physics, space

No one really knows what happens inside an atom. But two competing groups of scientists think they’ve figured it out. And both are racing to prove that their own vision is correct.

Here’s what we know for sure: Electrons whiz around “orbitals” in an atom’s outer shell. Then there’s a whole lot of empty space. And then, right in the center of that space, there’s a tiny nucleus — a dense knot of protons and neutrons that give the atom most of its mass. Those protons and neutrons cluster together, bound by what’s called the strong force. And the numbers of those protons and neutrons determine whether the atom is iron or oxygen or xenon, and whether it’s radioactive or stable.

Jan 2, 2020

Italian Longevity League

Posted by in category: life extension

The ILA welcomes its new federated member – the Italian Longevity League, Italy!

https://ec.europa.eu/eip/ageing/sites/eipaha/themes/eiponaha2/logo.png]

http://www.longevityalliance.org/?q=partners

Jan 2, 2020

Doctors Believe Health Supplement Led to 23-Year-Old’s Acute Liver Failure

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, food, health

WHAT SAY YE??? Beware, so many do not care if they kill you to make money from their snake oil products… r.p.berry & AEWR.


Doctors believe a health food supplement caused acute liver failure in an otherwise healthy 23-year-old Amarillo woman.

Emily Goss is starting the new year, with a new routine. She checks her vitals to make sure her body isn’t rejecting the new liver doctors implanted Christmas Day in an effort to save her life.

Continue reading “Doctors Believe Health Supplement Led to 23-Year-Old’s Acute Liver Failure” »

Jan 2, 2020

Scientists Brought Brains Brought Back to Life Four Hours After Death

Posted by in category: neuroscience

#13 in our top science stories of 2019.

Jan 2, 2020

5 Important Features of Your Brain, According to a Top Neuroscientist

Posted by in category: neuroscience

https://youtube.com/watch?v=Tnr4EyTegcs

In his new book, The Deep History of Ourselves: The Four-Billion-Year Story of How We Got Our Conscious Brains, neuroscientist Joseph Ledoux assigns himself the simple tasks of explaining how consciousness developed and redefining how we create and experience emotions.

Obviously, I’m being facetious. There’s nothing simple about these tasks, yet in Ledoux’s capable hands the reader is led, step by step, through the past four billion years of life on this planet. Consciousness, a phenomenon responsible for your ability to read and understand these words (as well as much, much more), often feels like a given, yet that’s only because human life is short and evolution is so very long.

Continue reading “5 Important Features of Your Brain, According to a Top Neuroscientist” »