A group of international scientists have mapped the genetic, cellular, and structural makeup of the human brain and the nonhuman primate brain.
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Neuroimaging technology has been shown to hold great promise in helping clinicians link specific symptoms of mental health disorders to abnormal patterns of brain activity. But a new study shows ... In the United States, substance use disorders are a leading cause of death among young people. Treatments such as deep brain stimulation hold promise for helping people overcome addiction, but many ...
A new study has written the most detailed 'parts list' of the human brain to date. This categorization of our brain cell types lays the groundwork to improve our understanding of our own ... An analysis of brain scans from more than 600 children and adolescents reveals genetically-mediated associations between the size of evolutionarily novel brain regions and intelligence test scores. ...
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Scientists generate first single-cell atlas of the primate brainA longstanding mystery in science is how the over 100 million individual neurons work together to form a network that forms the basis of who we are—every human thought, emotion and behavior.
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Sex Appears to Protect Brain Health in Older Adults, Scientists SayThe Best in Science News and Amazing Breakthroughs
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Yes, scientists have sequenced the entire human genome, but they're not done yetThe human genome, from end to end, has been sequenced, meaning scientists worldwide have identified most of the nearly 20,000 protein-coding genes. However, an international group of scientists notes there's more work to be done.
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Scientists decipher a central mechanism of energy production in the human bodySome two and a half thousand years ago, the Chinese general Sun Tzu wrote in the Art of War, 'Know your enemy and know yourself, then you need not fear the outcome of a hundred battles.' And what applied to the battlefields of ancient China also seems to apply in biomedical research.
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Scientists find oxygen levels increased during boom in ancient marine lifeFlorida State University scientists have uncovered answers to a conundrum in Earth's history: Why did marine life experience an extraordinary boom millions of years ago?
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Scientists unlock the secrets of nitrogen's solid phaseIn a groundbreaking study now published in the journal Nature Communications, the mysteries of nitrogen's solid phases have been solved, shedding light on its complex behavior.
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