3 Questions: Emery Brown on improving anesthesia with neuroscience
Professor describes a new research center he is working to develop where researchers will seek to improve patient care by integrating neuroscience and anesthesiology.
Professor describes a new research center he is working to develop where researchers will seek to improve patient care by integrating neuroscience and anesthesiology.
Tracing connections between neuron populations could help researchers map brain circuits that underlie behavior and perception.
State-of-the-art analysis of brain images from nearly 700 children has turned up surprisingly few links between white matter structure and reading ability.
MIT neuroscientists have identified a population of neurons in the human brain that respond to singing but not other types of music.
A model’s ability to generalize is influenced by both the diversity of the data and the way the model is trained, researchers report.
Fan Wang’s studies of how the brain controls pain may one day lead to new treatments that could help millions of people.
Different types of these branch-like projections process incoming information in different ways before sending it to the body of the neuron.
MIT researchers find activating a specific acetylcholine receptor in the brain reduces cocaine use in rodents.
A new deep-learning algorithm trained to optimize doses of propofol to maintain unconsciousness during general anesthesia could augment patient monitoring.
The act of holding information in mind is accompanied by coordination of rotating brain waves in the prefrontal cortex, a phenomenon that may convey specific advantages, a new study suggests.
In stepping down as co-director of the Harvard-MIT Program in Health Sciences and Technology, Brown will work to develop a new center for anesthesiology research.
Professor and cognitive neuroscientist recognized for groundbreaking work on the functional organization of the human brain.
MIT neuroscientists have developed a computer model that can answer that question as well as the human brain.
Extra chromosome alters chromosomal conformation and DNA accessibility in neural progenitor cells; study establishes senescence as a potentially targetable mechanism for future treatment.
Computational modeling shows that both our ears and our environment influence how we hear.