Episodes
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As a new professor, I was caught off guard by one part of the job: my role as an evaluator.
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Missing episodes?
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Follow these four tips to avoid using the information in problematic ways, including as a proxy for environmental variables.
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The feedback could lead to “novel ways” to conduct studies and reduce health disparities, a National Institutes of Health employee says.
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We found an issue with a specific type of brain imaging study and tried to share it with the field. Then the backlash began.
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Technological advancements have made it possible to study animals in more natural settings, but researchers are debating what that really means and whether natural is always better.
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The U.S. National Institutes of Health wants to regulate research involving cephalopods. But there aren’t enough rigorous studies to base the regulations on, veteran cephalopod researchers say.
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The retraction follows an editorial expression of concern that the journal applied to the paper in October, seven months after it was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
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Activity in the tiny brain region helps submissive rodents learn to avoid aggressors, and aggressive mice to curb their attacks, according to two recent studies.
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The award-winning researcher’s discoveries have changed the way we think about the brain; that’s exactly what her critics dislike.
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The cerebellum swelled in size before flight evolved among modern birds’ dinosaur ancestors, according to a new comparison of fossilized skulls and living birds.
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New technology that delivers much more than a simple DNA sequence could have a major impact on brain research, enabling researchers to study transcript diversity, imprinting and more.
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People with electrodes embedded deep in their brain are collaborating with a growing posse of plucky researchers to uncover the mysteries of real-world recall.
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Nerve cells in the brain and throughout the body can turbocharge tumor growth — a finding that not only expands conventional ideas about the nervous system but points to novel therapeutic targets for a range of malignancies.
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The collection offers a glimpse into differences in cell composition — across people and brain regions — that may shape neural function.
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More than one-third of a cohort of autistic toddlers no longer meet criteria for the condition at school age, according to a new study, but the findings may not generalize because the cohort is predominantly white and affluent.
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