News
Study: Functional Integration of 3D-Printed Cerebral Cortical Tissue into a Brain Lesion.Image Credit: Andrus Ciprian/Shutterstock *Important notice: bioRxiv publishes preliminary scientific ...
Hosted on MSN2mon
A Single Cubic Millimeter of Brain Tissue May Have Just Changed Neuroscience Forever - MSNA new package of papers examines the largest map yet of mammalian brain tissue. The map shows one cubic millimeter worth of neurons in the visual cortex of a mouse. Many brain functions ...
A Single Cubic Millimeter of Brain Tissue May Have Just Changed Neuroscience Forever Understanding human intelligence, here we come. By Caroline Delbert Published: Apr 29, 2025 8:30 AM EDT ...
Mild brain stimulation helped adults with weaker brain connections improve math speed by 6 percent. Memory tasks didn’t ...
WASHINGTON, April 9 (Reuters) - Neuroscientists have produced the largest wiring diagram and functional map of a mammalian brain to date using tissue from a part of a mouse's cerebral cortex ...
The study ‘Integration of 3D-Printed Cerebral Cortical Tissue into an ex vivo Lesioned Brain Slice’ will be published in Nature Communications at 10:00 AM BST/ 05:00 AM ET Wednesday 04 October ...
Researchers say they have mapped more than 200,000 cells in a cubic millimeter of brain tissue and have traced ... “There are many thousands of neuroscientists who study the cerebral cortex, ...
This image could be hung in a gallery, but it started life as a tiny chunk of a woman’s brain. In 2014, a woman undergoing surgery for epilepsy had a tiny chunk of her cerebral cortex removed ...
Slivers of brain tissue removed from the cortex during tumor resection surgery are subdivided and plated. [Courtesy of McGeachan et al., Nature Communications, 2025.] First authors Robert McGeachan ...
From a cubic millimeter of tissue, scientists constructed a precise, 3D map of the activity in a mouse’s brain, detailing 84,000 neurons and more than 500 million synapses.
The map shows one cubic millimeter worth of neurons in the visual cortex of a mouse. Many brain functions, particularly the senses, are similar across different mammal species.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results