Archive for the ‘neuroscience’ category: Page 852
Mar 31, 2017
Neuroscientists Have Accidentally Discovered a Whole New Role for the Cerebellum
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: biotech/medical, computing, neuroscience
One of the best-known regions of the brain, the cerebellum accounts for just 10 percent of the organ’s total volume, but contains more than 50 percent of its neurons.
Despite all that processing power, it’s been assumed that the cerebellum functions largely outside the realm of conscious awareness, instead coordinating physical activities like standing and breathing. But now neuroscientists have discovered that it plays an important role in the reward response — one of the main drives that motivate and shape human behaviour.
Not only does this open up new research possibilities for the little region that has for centuries been primarily linked motor skills and sensory input, but it suggests that the neurons that make up much of the cerebellum — called granule cells — are functioning in ways we never anticipated.
Mar 31, 2017
Has Neuroscience Been Looking In the Wrong Place All Along?
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: neuroscience
Philosopher Alva Noë says there’s a big problem with neuroscience: It assumes brains produce consciousness.
Mar 28, 2017
Elon Musk Wants To Put A Computer In Your Brain
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: computing, Elon Musk, neuroscience
Mar 28, 2017
Brain Structure That Helps Us Understand What Others Think Revealed
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: neuroscience
By the age of four years we suddenly start to understand what other people think and that their beliefs about the world might differ from our own. We then manage to do what 3-year-olds are not yet capable of – we can put ourselves in someone else’s shoes. Researchers from the Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences in Leipzig were able to show what supports this milestone in development: the maturation of a critical fibre connection in the brain.
Summary: Researchers identify brain areas associated with developing the ability to “put ourselves in other people’s shoes”.Source: Max Planck Institute. By the age of four years we suddenly st.
Mar 28, 2017
Brain to Machine Interface: Future A to Z
Posted by Alireza Mokri in categories: futurism, neuroscience
In this video series the Galactic Public Archives takes bite sized looks at a variety of terms, technologies, and ideas that are likely to be prominent in the future.
In this entry, we take a look at the rapidly developing technology of Brain to Machine interfaces.
Continue reading “Brain to Machine Interface: Future A to Z” »
Mar 27, 2017
The lessons of violence and inequality through the ages
Posted by Simon Waslander in categories: economics, neuroscience
History has shown us that only violence or huge disasters tend to reduce inequality. Which is frightening on it’s own.
The Great Leveller: Violence and the History of Inequality from the Stone Age to the Twenty-First Century By Walter Scheidel. Princeton University Press; 504 pages; $35 and £27.95.
AS A supplier of momentary relief, the Great Depression seems an unlikely candidate. But when it turns up on page 363 of Walter Scheidel’s “The Great Leveler” it feels oddly welcome. For once—and it is only once, for no other recession in American history boasts the same achievement—real wages rise and the incomes of the most affluent fall to a degree that has a “powerful impact on economic inequality”. Yes, it brought widespread suffering and dreadful misery. But it did not bring death to millions, and in that it stands out.
Continue reading “The lessons of violence and inequality through the ages” »
Mar 27, 2017
Elon Musk Launches Neuralink to Connect Brains With Computers
Posted by Blair Erickson in categories: biotech/medical, computing, Elon Musk, neuroscience
Somewhere in his packed schedule, he has found time to start a neuroscience company that plans to develop cranial computers, most likely to treat intractable brain diseases first, but later to help humanity avoid subjugation at the hands of intelligent machines.
Mar 27, 2017
Elon Musk’s new co could allow uploading, downloading thoughts: Wall Street Journal
Posted by Simon Waslander in categories: biotech/medical, computing, Elon Musk, neuroscience, singularity
This is big: Is the Singularity a step closer?
Tesla Inc founder and Chief Executive Elon Musk has launched a company called Neuralink Corp through which computers could merge with human brains, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing people familiar with the matter.
Neuralink is pursuing what Musk calls the “neural lace” technology, implanting tiny brain electrodes that may one day upload and download thoughts, the Journal reported. (on.wsj.com/2naUATf)
Mar 26, 2017
Stanford scientists find a previously unknown role for the cerebellum
Posted by Alireza Mokri in category: neuroscience
Researchers long believed that the cerebellum did little more than process our senses and control our muscles. New techniques to study the most densely packed neurons in our brains reveal that it may do much more.