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Archive for the ‘neuroscience’ category: Page 86

Jul 9, 2024

Brain Organoids Communicate: A Step Toward “Organoid Intelligence”

Posted by in categories: genetics, neuroscience

Scientists have connected two organoids together with an axon bundle, to study how brain areas communicate. They sent signals back and forth and responded to external stimulation. This could be a step toward biocomputing.

Learn about: axons, white matter, re-entry, optogenetics, myelination, entrainment, short-term potentiation.

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Jul 9, 2024

Thomas Hartung and colleagues | The future of organoid intelligence | Frontiers Forum Deep Dive 2023

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, chemistry, computing, engineering, ethics, health, neuroscience, policy

Eexxeccellent.


Human brains outperform computers in many forms of processing and are far more energy efficient. What if we could harness their power in a new form of biological computing?

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Jul 9, 2024

Machine-Learning Assisted Directed Evolution — Viviana Gradinaru — 10/25/2019

Posted by in categories: neuroscience, robotics/AI

“Machine-Learning Assisted Directed Evolution of Viral Vectors and Microbial Opsins for Minimally Invasive Neuroscience.” AI-4-Science Workshop, October 25, 2019 at Bechtel Residence Dining Hall, Caltech. Learn more about: — AI-4-science: https://www.ist.caltech.edu/ai4science/ — Events: https://www.ist.caltech.edu/events/ Produced in association with Caltech Academic Media Technologies. ©2019 California Institute of Technology.

Jul 9, 2024

Glial Cells Reprogrammed to Neurons for Brain Repair

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics, neuroscience

Summary: Researchers have discovered how glial cells can be reprogrammed into neurons through epigenetic modifications, offering hope for treating neurological disorders. This reprogramming involves complex molecular mechanisms, including the transcription factor Neurogenin2 and the newly identified protein YingYang1, which opens chromatin for reprogramming.

The study reveals how coordinated epigenome changes drive this process, potentially leading to new therapies for brain injury and neurodegenerative diseases.

Jul 9, 2024

Sean Carroll — Physics of Consciousness

Posted by in categories: cosmology, neuroscience, quantum physics

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How to explain our inner awareness that is at once most common and most mysterious? Traditional explanations focus at the level of neuron and neuronal circuits in the brain. But little real progress has motivated some to look much deeper, into the laws of physics — information theory, quantum mechanics, even postulating new laws of physics.

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Jul 9, 2024

Physicist argues about consciousness | Sean Carroll and Lex Fridman

Posted by in category: neuroscience

Lex Fridman Podcast full episode: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tdv7r2JSokIPlease support this podcast by checking out our sponsors:- HiddenLayer: https://

Jul 9, 2024

Sustaining wakefulness: Brainstem connectivity in human consciousness

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, chemistry, finance, neuroscience

Consciousness is comprised of arousal (i.e., wakefulness) and awareness. Substantial progress has been made in mapping the cortical networks that modulate awareness in the human brain, but knowledge about the subcortical networks that sustain arousal is lacking. We integrated data from ex vivo diffusion MRI, immunohistochemistry, and in vivo 7 Tesla functional MRI to map the connectivity of a subcortical arousal network that we postulate sustains wakefulness in the resting, conscious human brain, analogous to the cortical default mode network (DMN) that is believed to sustain self-awareness. We identified nodes of the proposed default ascending arousal network (dAAN) in the brainstem, hypothalamus, thalamus, and basal forebrain by correlating ex vivo diffusion MRI with immunohistochemistry in three human brain specimens from neurologically normal individuals scanned at 600–750 µm resolution. We performed deterministic and probabilistic tractography analyses of the diffusion MRI data to map dAAN intra-network connections and dAAN-DMN internetwork connections. Using a newly developed network-based autopsy of the human brain that integrates ex vivo MRI and histopathology, we identified projection, association, and commissural pathways linking dAAN nodes with one another and with cortical DMN nodes, providing a structural architecture for the integration of arousal and awareness in human consciousness. We release the ex vivo diffusion MRI data, corresponding immunohistochemistry data, network-based autopsy methods, and a new brainstem dAAN atlas to support efforts to map the connectivity of human consciousness.

One sentence summary We performed ex vivo diffusion MRI, immunohistochemistry, and in vivo 7 Tesla functional MRI to map brainstem connections that sustain wakefulness in human consciousness.

BF has a financial interest in CorticoMetrics, a company whose medical pursuits focus on brain imaging and measurement technologies. BF’s interests were reviewed and are managed by Massachusetts General Hospital and Mass General Brigham HealthCare in accordance with their conflict-of-interest policies.

Jul 9, 2024

How Brain Scientists Think About Consciousness

Posted by in category: neuroscience

Is consciousness a scientific problem to be solved? Or a philosophical problem that will remain a mystery? What do scientists who study the brain think? And why do they think the way they do? These leading brain scientists share their intimate ideas about how the brain generates consciousness.

Free access to Closer to Truth’s library of 5,000 videos: http://bit.ly/376lkKN

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Jul 9, 2024

Unlocking the Power of Your Brain: The Prefrontal Cortex Explained

Posted by in category: neuroscience

🧠 Dive into the fascinating world of the human brain with our latest video, ‘Unlocking the…

Jul 9, 2024

The Effects of Stress on Prefrontal Cortical Function

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics, neuroscience

Learn more about the Cognitive Science Student Association and the California Cognitive Science Conference at https://cssa.berkeley.edu.

Amy Arnsten — Yale University.

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