Architecture Of The Brain Current Events | Architecture Of The Brain News
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New at ETH Zurich: Postgraduate Studies in Landscape Architecture From October 2003, the ETH Zurich will offer a new one-year, full-time post-graduate diploma course in landscape architecture. The curriculum of the post-graduate studies (NDS) will concentrate on a theoretical and practical examination of contemporary urban space. Participants on the NDS course will gain insight into problems and solutions facing... view more... (2003-01-23)
Tiny but adaptable wasp brains show ability to alter their architecture For an animal that has a brain about the size of two grains of sand, a lot of plasticity seems to be packed into the head of the tropical paper wasp Polybia aequatorialis. view more (2009-10-15)
University of Kent launches new School of Architecture The University of Kent today announced the appointment of Don Gray as Professor of Architecture and Head of a new School of Architecture. The appointment signals the expansion of the University's academic portfolio to include programmes in architecture and interior design at both undergraduate and postgraduate level from September 2005. view more (2005-04-04)
Media invitation: Architecture of Fear 'It is not without significance that the extensive decentralisation of Western cities followed the first use of the atomic bomb in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Something similar is happening now in the wake of 9/11,' says Anthony Elliott, Professor of Sociology at the University of Kent, in the run up to his address at The Tate Modern on Friday 19... view more... (2004-11-17)
Direct recording shows brain signal persists even in dreamless sleep Neuroscientists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have taken one of the first direct looks at one of the human brain's most fundamental "foundations": a brain signal that never switches off and may support many cognitive functions. view more (2008-10-01)
Toward interoperability in EU-wide e-government Overcoming bureaucratic hurdles to set up a company in your own country is complicated enough; doing it elsewhere can be even more difficult. An architecture that allows different public administrations in different countries to interoperate offers one solution. view more (2005-05-20)
Discovery of a molecular mechanism underlying limb architecture A genetic study performed by Dr. Marie Kmita, a researcher at the Institut de Recherches Cliniques de Montréal (IRCM), in collaboration with Drs Basile Tarchini and Denis Duboule of the University of Geneva in Switzerland, sheds light on the origins of the architecture of arms and legs. view more (2006-10-26)
Human Brain Connectivity Mapping The unique connectivity pattern of a brain region determines the type of information available to it, and hence influences its function. Defining these patterns enhances our knowledge of human brain architecture and function. Non-invasive in vivo definition of brain connectivity patterns complements functional imaging and provides new... view more... (2004-09-23)
Estrogen withdrawal results in bone loss, research shows that the Estrogen Receptor has a fundamental role Professor Lance Lanyon, Principal of The Royal Veterinary College, Karla Lee, Helen Jessop, Rosemary Suswillo, Gul Zaman from the Department of Basic Sciences at The Royal Veterinary College have shown in their research that the Estrogen Receptor has a fundamental role in bone cells by adjusting the bone architecture to match the loads individuals... view more... (2003-07-25)
Reduced sleep quality can aggravate pre-existing psychological conditions Disturbed sleep is a commonly reported symptom among individuals diagnosed with anxiety disorders. view more (2007-06-13)
Risk and reward compete in brain That familiar pull between the promise of victory and the dread of defeat - whether in money, love or sport - is rooted in the brain's architecture, according to a new imaging study. view more (2008-10-10)
Gearing up for the next generation of Europe's cars More than 20 partners from all areas of the European car industry worked together in the EUREKA ITEA Cluster EAST-EEA project to develop a common software interface for electronic devices to be used in all cars from 2009. This will make the next generation of vehicles quicker to design and cheaper to bring to market, while maintaining high quality... view more... (2005-03-29)
Microfluidics and optical trapping integrated for the first time in new lab-on-a-chip research Researchers at Cornell University for the first time have integrated optical functions with microfluidic ones, enabling the sorting of particles by light. view more (2007-10-26)
World Wide Web Consortium Forms Technical Architecture Group W3C TAG to document principles of Web architecture, help resolve technical issues http://www.w3.org/ -- 11 December 2001 -- The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) today announced the creation of the W3C Technical Architecture Group (TAG), whose mission is to build consensus around principles of Web architecture and to interpret and clarify these... view more... (2001-12-11)
Media invitation: Turning the tables on archaeology A two-day conference at the University of Sheffield from Friday 23 April 2004 is set to give an insight into the history of food and table manners. The Table - The Second Course will examine how eating habits have changed through the ages, and how these developments affect the way we eat today. For example, Georgian architecture influenced table... view more... (2004-04-21)
Radiocarbon testing challenges understanding of ancient Hawaiian architecture, social complexity The development of monumental architecture and social complexity on the Hawaiian island of Maui occurred over a span of at least 500 years, according to the most detailed study to date on the antiquity of the island's extensive temple system. view more (2006-08-02)
Yale computer scientists devise a 'P4P' system for efficient Internet usage A Yale research team has engineered a system with the potential for making the Internet work more efficiently, in which Internet Service Providers (ISPs) and Peer-to-Peer (P2P) software providers can work cooperatively to deliver data. view more (2008-05-28)
When every photon counts The eyes of nocturnal mammals have very large numbers of highly-sensitive rod photoreceptors (the cell type responsible for night vision). They have to perceive light which is less than a millionth of the intensity of daylight. view more (2009-04-17)
Building a better telecom system Hurricane Katrina helped University of Texas professor, Alexis Kwasinski, formulate a new plan for the U.S. telecom system: a de-centralized power architecture that would have kept the lights and phones on in New Orleans. view more (2008-07-24)
Evaluation of a Product Platform Strategy In his dissertation, Mr. Petri I. Salonen explores the use of the product platform approach as applied to the development of analytical application software solutions. The product platform concept has been successfully demonstrated in several industries, for example, the automobile industry and the electronics industry (printers, cameras etc.). view more (2004-09-08)
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