Vividly imagining a positive interaction with someone can increase how much you like them — and even alter how your brain stores information about that person.
A new study led by cognitive neuroscientists at the University of Colorado Boulder and the Max Planck Institute for Human ...
A new study led by cognitive neuroscientists at the University of Colorado Boulder and the Max Planck Institute for Human ...
Imagination and Learning: A study shows that imagining positive encounters can improve how much we like someone by activating ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Brain cells tuned to music can predict the next note
Neuroscientists are closing in on a striking idea: some brain cells appear to be tuned specifically to music, firing in ...
A new Apple study presents a method that lets an AI model learn one aspect of the structure of brain electrical activity without any annotated data.
A brain signal that lights up when we anticipate rewards may hold the secret to helping people overcome depression, and Virginia Tech researchers are working to unlock its potential. Professors Pearl ...
The […] intuition that the conscious self is somehow apart from the rest of nature—a really-existing immaterial inner observer looking out onto a material ...
In a study in the Journal of Affective Disorders, Fralin Biomedical Research Institute scientists Pearl Chiu and Brooks Casas investigate how brain signals involved in reward learning might help ...
Novel adjunct treatments for posttraumatic stress disorder: Neurofeedback and deep brain reorienting
Dr. Lanius discusses the need for novel adjunct treatments for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), highlighting two ...
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