Morning Overview on MSN
Why some brains switch gears faster than others, new research reveals
Some people can drop a task midstream, respond to a curveball, and then slide back into deep focus with barely a hitch.
Morning Overview on MSN
Scientists mapped how the brain assembles itself from scratch
The human brain is often compared to a computer, but the latest wave of research shows it is closer to a self-building city, ...
LumiMind debuts real-time non-invasive brain computer interfaces at CES 2026, pairing live gameplay demos with LumiSleep, a ...
Neuroscientists have been trying to understand how the brain processes visual information for over a century. The development ...
Carnegie Mellon engineering researchers have designed the first microfabricated stainless steel neural probe that allows for safer, more accurate brain sensing.
The world’s most powerful supercomputers can now run simulations of billions of neurons, and researchers hope such models ...
Artificial intelligence (AI) is increasingly used to analyze medical images, materials data and scientific measurements, but ...
Your ability to notice what matters visually comes from an ancient brain system over 500 million years old.
A new machine-learning-based approach to mapping real-time tumor metabolism in brain cancer patients, developed at the ...
Human brains still react to chimp voices, hinting at a deep evolutionary link in how we recognize sound.
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