Identifying the structure and function of a brain hub
A direct comparison of sensory and higher-order thalamic circuits reveals fundamental differences in how they control the cerebral cortex.
A direct comparison of sensory and higher-order thalamic circuits reveals fundamental differences in how they control the cerebral cortex.
Norepinephrine-producing neurons in the locus coeruleus produce attention focus, impulse control via two distinct connections to prefrontal cortex.
Research on mice suggests aging affects a brain circuit critical for learning to make some types of decisions.
Political science graduate student Matthew Cancian brings his own military experience to bear on battlefield psychology.
Molecular biologist and professor emerita advocates for more inclusive science and advises how to get there.
MIT Professor Sinan Aral’s new book, “The Hype Machine,” explores the perils and promise of social media in a time of discord.
Scientists have found evidence of hot springs near sites where ancient hominids settled, long before the control of fire.
New statistical model may help scientists understand how animals infer whether surroundings are novel or haven’t changed enough to be a new context.
An MIT system uses wireless signals to measure in-home appliance usage to better understand health tendencies.
MIT Governance Lab and the Institute for Governance Reform, working with the government of Sierra Leone, conduct rapid-response surveys to address Covid-19.
Even when people believed Hillary Clinton would win the 2016 election, they did not use “she” to refer to the next president.
Study shows that people can boost attention by manipulating their own alpha brain waves.
System from MIT CSAIL sizes up drivers as selfish or selfless. Could this help self-driving cars navigate in traffic?
Political science doctoral student Clara Vandeweerdt studies how identity shapes beliefs on complex political topics such as climate change.
Move over, Alexa and Siri. Talking Mabu robot provides one-to-one support while relaying information to doctors.