There is a high chance that AI will benefit quantum computing development, but we need a different approach for it.
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 ...
Imagination and Learning: A study shows that imagining positive encounters can improve how much we like someone by activating ...
Dr. Lanius discusses the need for novel adjunct treatments for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), highlighting two ...
Imagination and Learning: A study shows that imagining positive encounters can improve how much we like someone by activating ...
How do wounded soldiers power through to achieve feats of heroism? Understanding how the brain works is a key to avoid losing wars.
Neuroscientists are closing in on a striking idea: some brain cells appear to be tuned specifically to music, firing in ...
A new study led by cognitive neuroscientists at the University of Colorado Boulder and the Max Planck Institute for Human ...
New research shows that deep learning can use EEG signals to distinguish Alzheimer’s disease from frontotemporal dementia ...
A breakthrough study published in npj Aging just introduced a refreshing alternative: a urinary microRNA aging clock. By ...
AI hallucination is often misread as creativity. This explains why it’s a symptom of optimization fatigue, and what that ...