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Blindsight: How brain sees what you do not see Blindsight is a phenomenon in which patients with damage in the primary visual cortex of the brain can tell where an object is although they claim they cannot see it. view more (2008-10-15)
Sound adds speed to visual perception The traditional view of individual brain areas involved in perception of different sensory stimuli-i.e., one brain region involved in hearing and another involved in seeing-has been thrown into doubt in recent years. view more (2008-08-12)
Study Indicates How We Maintain Visual Details In Short Term Memory Working memory (also known as short term memory) is our ability to keep a small amount of information active in our mind. view more (2009-02-23)
Reorganization of brain area for vision after stroke: May yield new treatments for brain injury New evidence from a patient shows that the area of the brain that processes visual inputs can reorganize after an injury caused by stroke. view more (2007-09-05)
Adult brain can change, study confirms It is well established that a child's brain has a remarkable capacity for change, but controversy continues about the extent to which such plasticity exists in the adult human primary sensory cortex. view more (2007-09-06)
Revealing the machinery underlying the 'plastic' juvenile brain Among the central mysteries of neurobiology is what properties of the young brain enable it to so adeptly wire itself to adapt to experience—a quality known as plasticity. view more (2007-03-01)
Memory experts show sleeping rats may have visual dreams Memories of our life stories may be reinforced while we sleep, MIT researchers report Dec. 17 in the advance online edition of Nature Neuroscience. view more (2006-12-19)
Color contrast is 'seen' by the brain early doors Colour contrast is detected much earlier in the brain than previously thought, a new study shows. view more (2007-09-10)
Cortical plasticity: it's time to get excited about inhibition Research from Brandeis University published online this week in Nature offers new insight into how neural circuits are shaped by experience. The article provides new evidence for the mechanisms that affect the ability of the visual cortex to plastically rearrange itself following periods of visual deprivation. view more (2006-08-24)
MIT: Long-distance brain waves focus attention Just as our world buzzes with distractions - from phone calls to e-mails to tweets - the neurons in our brain are bombarded with messages. view more (2009-05-29)
Everything in its place: Researchers identify brain cells used to categorize images Socks in the sock drawer, shirts in the shirt drawer, the time-honored lessons of helping organize one's clothes learned in youth. But what parts of the brain are used to encode such categories as socks, shirts or any other item, and how does such learning take place? view more (2006-08-28)
Antidepressants enhance neuronal plasticity in the visual system In the April 18 issue of Science, scientists from the Scuola Normale Superiore in Pisa, Italy and the Neuroscience Centre at the University of Helsinki, Finland, provide new information about the mechanism of action of antidepressant drugs. view more (2008-04-18)
Scientists adapt economics theory to trace brain's information flow Scientists have used a technique originally developed for economic study to become the first to overcome a significant challenge in brain research: determining the flow of information from one part of the brain to another. view more (2008-10-10)
Wired for sound: How the brain senses visual illusions In a study that could help reveal how illusions are produced in the brain's visual cortex, researchers at the UCSD School of Medicine have found new evidence of rapid integration of auditory and visual sensations in the brain. view more (2007-04-12)
Where the brain stores word meanings EMBARGOED UNTIL WEDNESDAY 18 NOVEMBER 1998 19:00 HRS GMT view more (1998-11-18)
Why our shifty eyes don't drive us crazy Our eyes are constantly making saccades, or little jumps. Yet the world appears to us as a smooth whole. Somehow, the brain's visual system "knows" where the eyes are about to move and is able to adjust for that movement. view more (2006-11-09)
Penn researchers report that gene therapy awakens the brain despite blindness from birth Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania have demonstrated that gene therapy used to restore retinal activity to the blind also restores function to the brain's visual center, a critical component of seeing. view more (2007-06-26)
Activation of the prefrontal cortex improves working memory Psychologists and neurologists invest considerable effort in the study of working memory. In terms of information retention, there is a difference between long-term memory, which is affected in diseases such as Alzheimer, and short-term or working memory, which allows us to make immediate decisions or structure a discourse. view more (2009-04-02)
The brain 'joins the dots' when drawing a cartoon face from memory In a study by Miall, Gowen and Tchalenko published by Elsevier, in the March issue of Cortex, a brain scanner was used to record the brain's activity in each stage of the process of drawing faces. view more (2009-03-19)
Scientists unmask brain's hidden potential Previous research has found that when vision is lost, a person's senses of touch and hearing become enhanced. But exactly how this happens has been unclear. view more (2008-08-27)
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