A new approach to curbing cocaine use
MIT researchers find activating a specific acetylcholine receptor in the brain reduces cocaine use in rodents.
MIT researchers find activating a specific acetylcholine receptor in the brain reduces cocaine use in rodents.
Professor and cognitive neuroscientist recognized for groundbreaking work on the functional organization of the human brain.
Eight postdocs and research scientists within the School of Science honored for contributions to the Institute.
MIT neuroscientists have developed a computer model that can answer that question as well as the human brain.
Dincă, Feng, Hunter, Shoemaker, and Wang are recognized for their efforts to advance science.
Sharing food and kissing are among the signals babies use to interpret their social world, according to a new study.
Computational modeling shows that both our ears and our environment influence how we hear.
Nine MIT researchers selected as finalists for 2021 prize supported by Northpond Ventures; grand prize winner to receive $250K toward commercializing her human health-related invention.
Study suggests this area of the visual cortex emerges much earlier in development than previously thought.
Human neurons have fewer ion channels, which might have allowed the human brain to divert energy to other neural processes.
A new machine-learning system helps robots understand and perform certain social interactions.
Neuroscientists find the internal workings of next-word prediction models resemble those of language-processing centers in the brain.
Professors Linda Griffith and Feng Zhang along with Guillermo Ameer ScD ’99, Darrell Gaskin SM ’87, William Hahn, and Vamsi Mootha recognized for contributions to medicine, health care, and public health.
When asked to classify odors, artificial neural networks adopt a structure that closely resembles that of the brain’s olfactory circuitry.
Dedicated circuits evaluate uncertainty in the brain, preventing it from using unreliable information to make decisions.