#contralateral-control

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Science
fromNature
2 days ago

Brain-machine interface reveals the origin of a widely used neural signal

High gamma activity in the brain's cortex is primarily generated by synchronized neuronal inputs, impacting the interpretation of neuroscientific studies.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

The Brain Does Not Develop in Isolation

Relational and intersubjective models of mind challenge traditional individualistic views in psychiatry and psychology, emphasizing social context in understanding psychological distress.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

Brain Injury May Reverse Pre-Injury Trauma Work

Brain injury often reactivates unresolved traumas, necessitating neurostimulation therapies and cognitive empathy for healing.
fromwww.npr.org
3 days ago

In the brain, objects seen and imagined follow the same neural path

"I can look at an object in the world around me, but I can also close my eyes and imagine the object," says Varun Wadia, highlighting the dual capability of visual perception and imagination.
Science
Medicine
fromWIRED
2 weeks ago

A New Implant Aims to Rewire Stroke Patients' Brains

Epia Neuro aims to help stroke patients regain hand function using a brain implant and motorized glove.
#brain-computer-interface
Medicine
fromNature
1 month ago

China approves brain chip to treat paralysis - a world first

China approved the first widely available brain-computer interface for paralyzed patients to restore hand movements outside clinical trials.
Medicine
fromNature
1 month ago

China approves brain chip to treat paralysis - a world first

China approved the first widely available brain-computer interface for paralyzed patients to restore hand movements outside clinical trials.
#artificial-intelligence
Data science
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago

A New Digital Twin for Brain Activity Aims to Speed Research

A new AI model can predict human brain activity from various stimuli, accelerating neuroscience research and understanding of the brain.
Science
fromNature
1 week ago

Mini models of the human brain are revealing how this complex organ takes shape

Organoids are revolutionizing brain research by enabling the study of development, neurodevelopmental conditions, and potential treatments for brain diseases.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
3 weeks ago

9 cognitive habits people develop when they grew up bilingual that have nothing to do with language and everything to do with how their brain learned to hold two realities at once - Silicon Canals

Bilingualism can delay Alzheimer's onset by five years and reshapes cognitive processes beyond language.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
3 weeks ago

How to Think About the Brain

The brain operates through localization, with specific areas dedicated to distinct tasks, despite outdated and simplistic representations of its function.
#brain-computer-interfaces
Medicine
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 month ago

Brain implant allows people who are paralyzed to type using their thoughts at speed of texting

Brain-computer interfaces now enable people with paralysis to type at 22 words per minute, approaching normal smartphone texting speeds.
Medicine
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 month ago

Brain implant allows people who are paralyzed to type using their thoughts at speed of texting

Brain-computer interfaces now enable people with paralysis to type at 22 words per minute, approaching normal smartphone texting speeds.
Mindfulness
fromMail Online
1 month ago

I sat on a 9,000 chair that dissociates your brain from your body

The Aiora chair, priced between £5,700 and £9,950, claims to induce altered mental states comparable to deep meditation through specialized seating design and biomechanics.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
3 weeks ago

Retraction Note: Multisensory learning binds neurons into a cross-modal memory engram

The article has been retracted due to irreproducible voltage imaging results and errors in data analysis, despite some conclusions being substantiated.
Medicine
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 month ago

Electrodes connected to the brain allow two people with paralysis to type with their minds

A brain-machine interface allows paralyzed patients to type on a keyboard using only their thoughts, achieving high-speed communication with minimal errors.
Science
fromNature
3 weeks ago

Functional hierarchy of the human neocortex across the lifespan - Nature

Brain network organization changes across the lifespan, revealing functional connectivity gradients that relate to cognitive and behavioral outcomes.
Mental health
fromFast Company
4 weeks ago

The case for giving yourself permission to breathe, according to neuroscience

Traditional wellness programs fail to reduce burnout because they optimize performance without first establishing genuine care and emotional support for employees.
Science
fromNature
3 weeks ago

First atlas of brain organization shows development over a lifetime

Scientists created an atlas mapping brain connectivity patterns across the human lifespan, linking them to cognitive performance and potential developmental issues.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
4 weeks ago

Why Handwriting Is Better for Your Brain Than Typing

Handwriting activates motor, language, and attention systems more fully than typing, improving memory through deeper processing and supporting cognitive health.
Education
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Why Uneven Development Matters in Dyslexia

Dyslexia involves unexpected reading difficulty despite strong cognitive abilities; removing this concept from definitions risks harming students' education by obscuring their strengths.
#left-handedness
Women in technology
fromwww.independent.co.uk
1 month ago

Left-handers may have competitive advantage over right-handed people

Left-handed people demonstrate stronger competitiveness traits, which may provide a psychological advantage in competition and explain why left-handedness persists despite right-handers comprising 90% of the population.
Typography
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Left-Handers Are Better at Mirror-Writing Than Right-Handers

Left-handers demonstrate significantly faster and more accurate mirror-writing abilities compared to right-handers, supported by scientific research.
Women in technology
fromwww.independent.co.uk
1 month ago

Left-handers may have competitive advantage over right-handed people

Left-handed people demonstrate stronger competitiveness traits, which may provide a psychological advantage in competition and explain why left-handedness persists despite right-handers comprising 90% of the population.
Psychology
fromMail Online
1 month ago

'Lefties' are more competitive than right-handers, study finds

Left-handed people demonstrate higher competitiveness and stronger drive to win than right-handed individuals, potentially explaining the evolutionary persistence of left-handedness in human populations.
Books
fromFast Company
1 month ago

Can't read books anymore? Neuroscience has a 5-step plan to get your focus back

Declining deep reading ability reflects harmful brain changes, but neuroscience provides strategies to restore focused reading skills.
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

New Insights on the Evolution of Right- and Left-Handedness

The fighting hypothesis proposes that there is a so-called frequency-dependent maintenance of left-handedness. The main idea is that over the tens of thousands of years of human evolution, left-handers did have an advantage in fights due to a surprise effect. This gives them an evolutionary survival benefit since they win more fights.
Psychology
Science
fromFuturism
1 month ago

Researchers Upload Fly's Brain to Matrix, Let It Control Virtual Body

Eon Systems created a computational model of a fruit fly's 125,000 neurons and 50 million synapses that exhibits multiple behaviors in a virtual environment with 95% accuracy in predicting motor behavior.
OMG science
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

The Divided Brain: How Two Halves Create One Mind

Brain hemispheres are structurally and functionally specialized yet continuously communicate via the corpus callosum, with contralateral control enhancing perceptual and motor efficiency.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Denial of Brain: How Therapy Can Struggle With Neuroscience

Therapists exhibit brain denial rooted in mind-body dualism and mortality anxiety, while others misuse neuroscience for marketing, leaving patients without evidence-based brain-informed care.
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

AI-Decoded Brain Signals May Help Paralyzed Regain Movement

Artificial intelligence (AI) machine learning is making a difference in assistive technology to help restore movement for the paralyzed. A new study in the American Institute of Physics journal APL Bioengineering shows how AI has the potential to restore lower-limb functions in those with severe spinal cord injuries (SCIs) by identifying patterns in brain signals captured noninvasively via electroencephalography (EEG).
Artificial intelligence
Medicine
fromwww.npr.org
1 month ago

A neuroscientist heads to the Winter Paralympics

Sydney Peterson, a cross-country skier with dystonia, competes in the 2026 Winter Paralympics while pursuing a Ph.D. in neuroscience studying movement disorders.
#neuroplasticity
fromAeon
2 months ago
Philosophy

What the metaphor of 'rewiring' gets wrong about neuroplasticity | Aeon Essays

fromAeon
2 months ago
Philosophy

What the metaphor of 'rewiring' gets wrong about neuroplasticity | Aeon Essays

Mindfulness
fromEntrepreneur
1 month ago

The Neuroscience Behind Why Leaders Stall Under Pressure

Right brain generates ideas creatively while left brain edits logically; analysis paralysis occurs when the editing function blocks ideation during high-stress situations.
#brain-health
#brain-stimulation
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Can Brain Stimulation Make Us More Altruistic?

Synchronizing brain activity between frontal and parietal regions through electrical stimulation increases altruistic choices, particularly when personal costs are high.
Productivity
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Executive Function Myths That Need to Go

Executive function struggles do not reflect character or morality, and myths conflating the two harm personal growth and self-compassion.
Education
fromNature
2 months ago

How learning handwriting trains the brain: the science behind the cursive wars

Cursive penmanship is being reinstated in schools because pen-based letter production activates the brain more than typing, though cursive-specific benefits remain limited.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

When Autism and ADHD Travel Together

AuDHD—being both autistic and ADHD—affects 50-70% of autistic people and 20-65% of ADHD individuals, yet remains underdiagnosed due to diagnostic overshadowing and historical clinical restrictions.
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Who Is to Blame for Our Choices?

Do you blame others for the choices you are making? Have you blamed others for the previous choices you have made? To shed more light on these questions, you might also ask yourself: "What am I responsible for, and what power do I have?" From there, you might agree with this self-reflective response: "I am responsible for, and I've got the power over what I think, do, say, learn, and choose" (Purje, 2014).
Philosophy
fromScienceDaily
2 months ago

MRI scans show exercise can make the brain look younger

We found that a simple, guideline-based exercise program can make the brain look measurably younger over just 12 months. Many people worry about how to protect their brain health as they age. Studies like this offer hopeful guidance grounded in everyday habits. These absolute changes were modest, but even a one-year shift in brain age could matter over the course of decades.
Health
Psychology
fromWIRED
1 month ago

Left-Handed People Are More Competitive, Says Science

Left-handedness persists at stable 10% rates due to frequency-dependent evolutionary advantages in competitive situations, where left-handers' unpredictability provides strategic benefits that disappear if they become too common.
Education
fromScience of Running
1 month ago

Training the Brain and Body: A discussion on the dynamics of physiology and neurology.

Effective coaching balances physiological and neurological understanding, values being 'good enough', emphasizes flexibility over rigid optimization, and tailors approaches to diverse athlete types.
fromFast Company
1 month ago

Our brains are wired to ignore information. Here are neuroscience-backed tips for communicating memorably

The human brain is engineered to ignore most of what it sees and hears, according to the neuroscientists I interviewed for the audio original Viral Voices. If that's the case, how are you supposed to make a memorable impression? The empowering news is that if you understand how the brain works, what it discards, and what it pays attention to, you'll be far more persuasive than you've ever imagined. Persuasive people have influence in their personal and professional lives.
Philosophy
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

It's About Time: Timing Issues in Consciously Guided Action

The conscious field enables simultaneous evaluation of stimuli processed at different speeds, allowing their associated action plans to collectively influence action selection.
fromBig Think
1 month ago

The brain after blindness: How newly-sighted people build a visual world

If we told them to look at the face, they could usually manage it. But they were mostly looking at the hands. The Prakash children eventually learn to look at faces when spoken to - usually a few months after their surgeries. Their experiences reveal that seeing doesn't come naturally the moment a person is cured of blindness. Newly-sighted people must learn to see.
Science
fromFast Company
2 months ago

Why your brain needs downtime to outthink your competition

Think of your creativity like a high-performance garden: If you focus only on the visible harvest (outputs) and never allow the soil to lie fallow (liminal space) or the bees to roam freely (play), the ground eventually becomes depleted. Boredom is the signal that the soil needs replenishing, ensuring that your next season of work is a flourish rather than a struggle.
Mindfulness
#brain-plasticity
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago
Psychology

Neuroplasticity Across the Lifespan

Brain plasticity enables structural and functional changes throughout life, but remains constrained by biological boundaries and developmental timing.
fromNature
2 months ago
Science

Daily briefing: Exercise rewires the brain for endurance, in mice

Repeated exercise sessions rewire the brain, making neurons faster to activate and enabling improved running endurance.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Neuroplasticity Across the Lifespan

Brain plasticity enables structural and functional changes throughout life, but remains constrained by biological boundaries and developmental timing.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Circumstances, Considerations and Choices

Intrinsic motivation and personal attitude primarily determine behavior, and individuals control and are accountable for their own thoughts, actions, and responses.
Science
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

How the Cerebellum Helps Words Flow From Your Brain

A right posterior cerebellar region partners with left-hemisphere language centers to support fluency, sharing neural mechanisms with physical coordination across hemispheres.
#parkinsons-disease
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Am I Left-Handed or Mixed-Handed?

Handedness exists in three forms: left, right, and mixed, with many individuals unaware of mixed-handedness and mixed-handedness measurable by questionnaires.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

From Trauma to Tetris: How Neuroplasticity Rewires Memories

Tetris and similar visuospatial tasks can reduce traumatic memory intensity by interfering with visual imagery processing, offering women practical tools for managing trauma and chronic stress.
Medicine
fromwww.bbc.com
2 months ago

The new treatment giving people their voices back

Platelet-rich plasma (PRP) injections into scarred vocal cords can promote regeneration, improve voice projection, and offer a potentially cheaper, longer-lasting treatment for vocal damage.
Medicine
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 months ago

Brain training may boost immune response to vaccines

Activating reward-related deep-brain regions via neurofeedback enhances antibody responses to vaccines, showing trained brain activity can strengthen immune response.
fromFast Company
2 months ago

How to train your brain like your muscles, according to a neurologist

It might come as a surprise to learn that the brain responds to training in much the same way as our muscles, even though most of us never think about it that way. Clear thinking, focus, creativity, and good judgment are built through challenge, when the brain is asked to stretch beyond routine rather than run on autopilot. That slight mental discomfort is often the sign that the brain is actually being trained, a lot like that good workout burn in your muscles.
Science
fromNature
2 months ago

Exercise rewires the brain - boosting the body's endurance

Betley and his colleagues were curious about what happens in the brain as people get stronger through exercise. They decided to focus on the ventromedial hypothalamus, a brain region that regulates appetite and blood sugar. The team then zeroed in on a group of neurons in that region that produce a protein called steroidogenic factor 1 (SF1), which is known to play a part in regulating metabolism. A previous study found that the deletion of the gene that codes for SF1 impairs endurance in mice.
Science
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Are Frontal Lobe Breakups Real?

There are lots of reasons why relationships fall apart; all kinds of incompatibilities can doom romance. Some are trivial, but occasionally there might be something more profound at the root of an estrangement. Recently, the concept of the "frontal lobe breakup" appeared in popular culture. The idea is that the final stage of development in the executive regions of the brain-the frontal lobes-changes someone's perspective about their relationship. The onset of advanced cognitive skills in one partner creates a gap in maturity too big to bridge.
Psychology
Science
fromNature
2 months ago

Many people have no mental imagery. What's going on in their brains?

Approximately 4% of people have aphantasia, experiencing little or no visual mental imagery despite retaining conceptual and verbal knowledge.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

How the Brain Chooses What Matters

Selective sensory prioritization can improve clarity by letting one modality dominate when multisensory integration would create competition or reduce precision.
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Attribution Theory and Achievement Considerations

Ability is thought of as being an internal stable factor over which a person may not think they have any control. However, one should consider that the ability to control one's own learning may become available to an individual if they actively engage in their learning. This active learning engagement has the potential to change neurological pathways, leading to changes in cognitive and skill-acquisition capacities, as well as advances in knowledge, potential, insight, and creativity(Arrowsmith-Young, 2012; Coyle, 2009; Doidge, 2010, 2015).
Psychology
fromFast Company
1 month ago

How hesitation is a fundamental brain feature, according to neuroscientists

At the Winter Olympics, skiers, bobsledders, speedskaters, and many other athletes all have to master one critical moment: when to start. That split second is paramount during competition because when everyone is strong and skilled, a moment of hesitation can separate gold from silver. A competitor who hesitates too much will be left behind -but moving too early will get them disqualified.
Science
Psychology
fromBig Think
2 months ago

How training your gaze could help you master sports - and your own attention

Superior visual search strategies and eye-movement use distinguish some elite athletes from less-skilled players, enabling exceptional performance despite ordinary physical attributes.
Science
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

How Meaning Emerges From Brain Circuitry

Meaning arises from distributed, context-dependent neural assemblies that link sensory-motor patterns, learned associations, evolutionary history, and goal-directed circuits to produce 'aboutness.'
Science
fromFast Company
2 months ago

Neuroscience just discovered a weird way to tell when someone is really listening to you

People blink less when they concentrate harder on listening, so decreased blink rate can indicate attentive listening.
fromFuturism
2 months ago

Scientists Preparing to Simulate Human Brain on Supercomputer

The team, which is being led by Jülich neurophysics professor Markus Diesmann, will leverage the Joint Undertaking Pioneer for Innovative and Transformative Exascale Research (JUPITER) supercomputer for their simulation. JUPITER is currently the fourth most powerful supercomputer in the world according to the TOP500 list, and features thousands of graphical processing units. The team demonstrated last month that a " spiking neural network " could be scaled up and run on JUPITER, effectively matching the cerebral cortex's 20 billion neurons and 100 trillion connections.
Science
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