Skip to content ↓

Topic

School of Science

Download RSS feed: News Articles / In the Media / Audio

Displaying 1321 - 1335 of 1611 news clips related to this topic.
Show:

Boston Herald

MIT researchers have found a possible link between attention deficit disorders and autism, reports Lindsay Kalter for The Boston Herald. “One of the long-term goals is gene therapy where we can actually introduce genetic material that might be missing from the human,” explains grad. student Michael Wells.

Popular Science

Popular Science reporter Claire Maldarelli writes that researchers from MIT have identified how sensory overload occurs for people with neurodevelopmental disorders. Based off their findings, the researchers hope they can "classify these disorders in a better way, but also develop therapies that alleviate or diminish the symptoms.”

Economist

MIT researchers have shown that memories can be restored using optogenetics, findings that could help treat Alzheimer’s. According to The Economist, the findings provide evidence “about how memories are lost during the early stages of the disease and may point to how…those memories might be brought back.”

CBS News

A new study conducted by MIT researchers suggests that optogenetics could one day be used to help stimulate lost memories in Alzheimer’s patients, reports Ashley Welch for CBS News. Walsh writes that the researchers have “found evidence that ‘lost’ memories may just be inaccessible, with the potential to be retrieved.”

Scientific American

In an article posted by Scientific American, Sara Reardon writes that MIT researchers have shown that patients with Alzheimer’s can still form new memories and that lost memories could potentially be recalled using optogenetics. The findings “may allow more targeted stimulation, especially once researchers understand what happens to memories after they leave the hippocampus.”

HuffPost

Huffington Post reporter Ann Brenoff writes about a new MIT study that finds that Alzheimer’s patients may one day be able to recover lost memories using optogenetics. “The findings raise the hope — and possibility — that future treatments might indeed reverse some of the memory loss in early-stage Alzheimer’s patients.”

The Washington Post

Washington Post reporter Ariana Eunjung Cha writes that MIT researchers have found evidence that memories lost due to Alzheimer’s disease could potentially be recalled using optogenetics. Cha writes that the research “raises the hope of future treatments that could reverse some of the ravages of the disease on memory.”

CBS Boston

CBS Boston reports on a new study by MIT researchers that shows that memories lost due to Alzheimer’s disease may be recovered. The research shows “that while it may be hard for people with early Alzheimer’s to access memories, they are still retrievable.”

Guardian

MIT researchers have found that cell stimulation may one day be a tool in helping Alzheimer’s patients recall lost memories, according to The Guardian. The findings raise “the possibility of future treatments that reverse memory loss in early stages of the disease.”

The Washington Post

MIT researchers have found evidence that there may be windows of opportunity during which drugs are more effective at treating cancer, reports Ariana Eunjung Cha for The Washington Post. "If we know the route to resistance," explains Prof. Michael Hemann, "we can ambush tumor cells."

Guardian

MIT researchers have uncovered a potential link between a high-fat diet and increased risk of many types of cancer, reports Chukwuma Muanya for The Guardian. Muanya explains that the study “reveals the effect that a high-fat diet has on the biology of stem cells… and how this might make cancer more likely.”

HuffPost

A study by MIT researchers illustrates how the brain responds to music, writes Jill Suttie for The Huffington Post.  "You want to know what is it about bluegrass music that makes it sound like bluegrass? We think that finding this neural population will help us to answer that question going forward,” explains postdoc Sam Norman-Haignere. 

STAT

Prof. Edward Boyden speaks with STAT about winning the Breakthrough Prize and his research at MIT. Boyden explains that the technique he developed to examine brain samples is being applied to “bacteria, cancer, biopsies, virology questions. There’s a huge pent-up demand for ways of seeing large objects with nanoscale precision.”

CBS Boston

A new study by MIT researchers suggests that sea sponges may have been the first animal on Earth, CBS Boston reports. “Based on new genetic tests, researchers can say with confidence that molecules produced by sea sponges have been found in 640 million-year-old rocks.”

Inside Higher Ed

Inside Higher Ed's Carl Straumsheim speaks with Dr. Peter Fritschel about how LIGO researchers selected Physical Review Letters to publish the team’s discovery of gravitational waves. After LIGO members cast their votes, Fritschel explained that PRL was a “pretty clear winner,” citing its reputation as a “premier journals for physics results.”