3 Questions: Claire Wang on training the brain for memory sports
The MIT sophomore and award-winning memory champion explains what these competitions are all about and why you might want to build a “memory palace.”
The MIT sophomore and award-winning memory champion explains what these competitions are all about and why you might want to build a “memory palace.”
Yiming Chen ’24, Wilhem Hector, Anushka Nair, and David Oluigbo will start postgraduate studies at Oxford next fall.
Using fMRI, the research team identified 24 networks that perform specific functions within the brain’s cerebral cortex.
The new Tayebati Postdoctoral Fellowship Program will support leading postdocs to bring cutting-edge AI to bear on research in scientific discovery or music.
The newly identified pathways appear to relay emotional information that helps to shape the motivation to take action.
The new study also identifies factors that can make these efforts more successful.
The devices could be a useful tool for biomedical research, and possible clinical use in the future.
Labs that can’t afford expensive super-resolution microscopes could use a new expansion technique to image nanoscale structures inside cells.
A new study adds evidence that consciousness requires communication between sensory and cognitive regions of the brain’s cortex.
The Kuggie Vallee Distinguished Lectures and Workshops presented inspiring examples of success, even as the event evoked frank discussions of the barriers that still hinder many women in science.
New dataset of “illusory” faces reveals differences between human and algorithmic face detection, links to animal face recognition, and a formula predicting where people most often perceive faces.
Elemind, founded by researchers from MIT, has developed a headband that uses acoustic stimulation to move people into a sleep state.
New statistical models based on physiological data from more than 100 surgeries provide objective, accurate measures of the body’s subconscious perception of pain.
New research suggests neurons protect and preserve certain information through a dedicated zone of stable synapses.
MIT researchers investigate the neural circuits that underlie placebos’ ability to relieve chronic and acute pain.