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Aug 14, 2017Press Release, News from SfN
A study in eNeuro shows that, when remembering a sequence of events, the brain focuses on the event paid the least attention, rather than replaying the events in the order they occurred. This finding suggests that attention during the initial encoding of a memory influences how information is manipulated in working memory.
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Aug 14, 2017Press Release, News from SfNNew experiments described in The Journal of Neuroscience support distinct roles for two brain pathways in processing information related to an object, with one carrying a largely invariant representation of an object and the other a flexible one depending on what we do with an object.
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Aug 14, 2017Press Release
Testosterone controls specific features of birdsong in two distinct regions of the canary brain that resemble the human motor cortex.
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Aug 11, 2017News from SfNRead science policy and advocacy news from the week of August 11, 2017
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Aug 07, 2017Press Release
Structural connections between frontal and parietal areas in children’s brains can predict their ability to reason later in life, reports new research published in The Journal of Neuroscience.
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Aug 04, 2017News from SfNRead science policy and advocacy news from the week of August 4, 2017
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Jul 31, 2017Press Release, News from SfNMice genetically modified to model autism spectrum disorders (ASD) cause changes in the behavior of their unmodified littermates when housed together. The findings, published in eNeuro, show how social environment shapes behaviors characteristic of mouse models for ASD and have implications for the interpretation of results obtained from mouse models of psychiatric disorders.
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Jul 28, 2017News from SfNRead science policy and advocacy news from the week of July 28, 2017.
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Jul 24, 2017Press ReleasePain sensitivity associated with alcohol withdrawal may activate the same brain region in both drinking and non-drinking mice, finds a study published in eNeuro.
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Jul 24, 2017Press ReleaseIndividual differences in the pattern of release of the hormone cortisol in response to a stressful experience reveal how stressed a person actually feels, suggests a study of healthy women published in The Journal of Neuroscience. This approach could help to better identify and treat individuals more susceptible to the negative feelings associated with the physiological stress response.
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