Neuroscience and Psychology Suggest No Surprise Victory for Trump This Time
His inflammatory appeals are less likely to activate the same decision-making circuits as in 2016
R. Douglas Fields is a senior investigator at the National Institutes of Health’s Section on Nervous System Development and Plasticity. He is author of Electric Brain: How the New Science of Brainwaves Reads Minds, Tells Us How We Learn, and Helps Us Change for the Better (BenBella Books, 2020). Credit: Nick Higgins
His inflammatory appeals are less likely to activate the same decision-making circuits as in 2016
White matter, the insulation around our neural wiring, plays a critical role in acquiring knowledge
We need to figure out the ethical implications before they arrive
Forming lasting memories appears to depend on an interaction between glial cells and brain waves that are produced during sleep
Experiments in humans and animals have started to identify how violent behaviors begin in the brain
A session at a recent scientific meeting exposed the dangers not of mythical high-tech weapons but of the heedless rush to sensationalize
A Valentine’s Day meditation on why bright women sometimes gravitate to not-so-bright men
The magazine is more widely cited than the Bible by the Oxford English Dictionary
A dispute at a big neuroscience meeting erupts over whether the field needs new thinking about the way clusters of neurons process information
Science can help society grapple with the horrors of modern gun violence
An electronic bracelet is being readied for mental control of computers, prosthetics and other devices—all without the need to drill a hole in your head
Cuban scientists and a new American report both shoot down a list of bizarre theories
Nearly 90 years old, electroconvulsive therapy can rescue some people, but not others, from depression, bipolar and other mental disorders
Research presented at a Berlin psychiatric conference shows teenage cannabis use hastens onset of schizophrenia in vulnerable individuals
Sarin's lethality is well known, but the lingering effects on victims who don't succumb are less familiar
Experts call the technology a “significant achievement,” but critics say the risks may not be justified
To understand this election you must understand the brain’s threat detection mechanism
We gain most of our knowledge without any instruction. Now science is unraveling how our brain pulls off this everyday miracle
Maternal stress in the wake of the attacks might have led to selective miscarriage of male fetuses
Might a little-known cranial nerve be the route by which human pheromones turn us on?
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