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Oct 11, 2017News from SfN, Press ReleaseSearch through more than 15,000 abstracts and to create customized schedules with the mobile app »
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Oct 09, 2017Press Release, News from SfNA neuroimaging study of two monkeys published in JNeurosci identifies a brain network that tracks the location of an object approaching the face and anticipates its potential consequences upon making contact with the body.
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Oct 09, 2017Press Release, News from SfNNeurons that enable honeybees to sense the waggle dance are investigated in new research published in JNeurosci.
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Oct 04, 2017News from SfN, Press ReleaseSfN President Eric Nestler released a statement responding to the devastation in Puerto Rico as well as other natural disasters.
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Oct 03, 2017News from SfN, Press ReleaseSfN congratulates a trio of longtime scientific collaborators »
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Sep 25, 2017Press Release, News from SfN
Sleep deprivation may disrupt the brain's ability to integrate information over time, potentially contributing to the decline in cognitive performance observed during extended time awake, suggests a study in rats published in JNeurosci.
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Sep 25, 2017Press Release, News from SfN
A neuroimaging study published in JNeurosci reveals the neural network responsible for attributing the sense of touch to a location in space develops and operates differently in individuals blind from birth compared to sighted individuals.
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Sep 25, 2017Press Release, News from SfNMice exposed to scents of mint or fresh cut grass before and shortly after birth show increased responses in a specific population of odor-processing neurons to a variety of odors, according to new research published in eNeuro.
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Sep 18, 2017Press Release, News from SfN
Increased activity in a brain region involved in motivation may protect from depressive symptoms associated with poor sleep, according to a large study of young adults published in JNeurosci.
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Sep 18, 2017Press Release, News from SfNNew research published in JNeurosci identifies a motor pathway between the forebrain and brainstem that works like a dimmer switch to regulate swimming speed in the sea lamprey – a primitive, jawless fish with an eel-like body studied by neuroscientists as a model of the vertebrate nervous system.
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