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121 - 130 of 229 results
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Listening to music activates many brain areas, and this tune can help you learn about some of those areas.
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Thirst is a basic drive for people to consume fluids, motivated by brain and body regions working to maintain homeostasis, or an internal physiological balance.
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Scientists think déjà vu might be a hiccup in the process of memory consolidation.
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Taylor Joel Woodward, a post-baccalaureate research assistant at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus
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Cognitive neuroscience may shed light on how meditation could help with mental health.
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People with akinetopsia, or “motion blindness,” instead see the world as a series of freeze-frame images.
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While you dream, your body is temporarily paralyzed. Sometimes this inability to move persists even after you've woken up.
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Conspiracy theories take advantage of our pattern-seeking brains by grabbing attention, triggering strong emotions, and giving meaning to random events.
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Though the two hemispheres in the brain have separate functions, there is typically no overall dominant side — both constantly work together to help us complete daily tasks.
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Learning something new doesn’t generate new brain cells, but continued learning does create stronger connections between neurons. Here’s how.