MPFI Scientists have discovered how two brain areas work together like an hourglass to flexibly control movement timing.
In this Healio video, David G. Standaert, MD, PhD, discusses the keynote lecture given at the 2025 International Congress of Parkinson’s Disease and Movement Disorders.
Whether speaking or swinging a bat, precise and adaptable timing of movement is essential for everyday behavior. Although we ...
Asianet Newsable on MSN
Supercomputer Creates Highly Realistic Virtual Brain with Millions of Neurons
Using Japan’s Fugaku supercomputer, scientists created the most realistic virtual mouse cortex yet. With millions of neurons and billions of synapses, it allows researchers to observe how brain ...
Researchers have created one of the most detailed virtual mouse cortex simulations ever achieved by combining massive ...
ScienceAlert on MSN
Breakthrough Helps Scientists Grow More Realistic Human Brain Models
Slicing up and analyzing real, living, three-dimensional brain tissue comes with some obvious complications – as in, it tends ...
Robots that can sense and respond to the world like humans may soon be a reality as scientists have created an artificial ...
For the first time, scientists have grown functional, brain-like tissue without using any animal-derived materials or added ...
New applications of AI and machine learning techniques were presented at Neuroscience 2025, the annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience and the world’s largest source of emerging news about ...
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