Over the past decades, neuroscience studies have painted an increasingly detailed picture of the human brain, its ...
So-called “offline states”—when a person isn’t thinking about much and their attention is free to wander —give the brain an ...
The brain's ability to process information is known to be supported by intricate connections between different neuron populations. A key objective of neuroscience research has been to delineate the ...
The human brain, often hailed as nature’s most powerful computer, is surprisingly slow when it comes to handling information. While our senses gather a mountain of data every second, our actual ...
How does human echolocation work? Researcher found that the brain accumulates information across multiple mouth clicks to ...
Imagine you’re in a train station. You can hear a screeching locomotive, a musician’s guitar, and your neighbor’s phone ...
One potential underlying cause of symptoms in individuals with depression is an emotion- processing bias which causes them to have a stronger response to negative information more so than positive.
Multiple regions of the brain engage in fast-moving conversations to understand language, UTHealth Houston researchers have ...
Individuals with autism interpret information, emotions, and sensory input differently than the neurotypical population. Although behaviour changes such as less eye contact or repeated movements are ...