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Breaking Sound Barriers
Electrical Engineers Develop Glove That Translates Sign Language

A new high-tech glove enables the translation of sign language into written text, facilitating communication for the hearing or speech impaired. The glove senses movements of the hand and fingers, ... > watch video

Singing Coach
Software Engineers Develop Biofeedback Method for Singing Lessons

Keeping a beat or staying on-key can be acquired skills. Software engineers have designed a new software package to make that easier, turning your computer into a singing teacher. The system plots ... > watch video

Even If You Don't Blink, You'll Miss It
Shocking Images Can Temporarily Inhibit Image Recognition

Neuropsychologists conducted an experiment in which they exposed subjects to rapid sequences of images, some of which had gory or erotic content. Most people could not remember seeing ordinary images ... > watch video

Quit Smoking Vaccine
Addiction Specialists Test Innovative Drug

Smokers who want to quit might soon be able to be vaccinated against their addiction. The vaccine, which is in clinical trials, consists of five shots over the course of one year. The vaccine binds ... > watch video

Better at Bat
Psychologists Link Hitting Skills to Vision

Cognitive psychologists have discovered that baseball skills correlate with how a player sees the ball: Athletes who see the ball bigger than it is tend to perform better. In the experiments, ... > watch video

Gene Chip for Personalized Meds
Psychiatrists Can Now Predict An Individual Patient's Response To A Drug

The first in a new generation of gene microarrays, computer chips that chemically or electrically express DNA, can predict how a person's body will metabolize about 25 percent of drugs on the market, ... > watch video

Diagnosing Alzheimer's Early
Neurologists, Imaging Scientists Use Medical Physics to Spot Disease in Blood Vessels

A new brain-imaging method allows physicians to diagnose Alzheimer's before its onset. A radioactive dye is injected in the blood and travels to the brain, where it attaches to plaque deposits of ... > watch video

Learning to Walk Again
Neurosurgeons Cut Surgical Procedure Time with New Device

In a method called deep brain stimulation, certain movement disorders are treated by implanting wires in the brain that deliver electrical signals. The surgical procedure can last up to eight hours, ... > watch video

Stroke Stopper
Interventional Neuroradiologists Treat Brain Strokes with New Kind of Stent

A new "wingspan" stent helps restore blood flow for patients with intracranial atherosclerotic disease, or ICAD. Surgeons insert the stent up the leg arteries, guide it to the brain, then let its ... > watch video

Predicting Alzheimer's
Psychiatrists Can Predict Onset of Alzheimer's with New EEG Test

Using new computer software that analyzes EEG data, psychiatrists can now better distinguish early signs of Alzheimer's from normal aging, by spotting marked differences between the left and right ... > watch video

Spinal Cord Injuries: Back on Your Feet
Neurologists Combine Electric Stimuli with Excercise to Reverse Paralysis

Paraplegic patients who still have some active nerve endings in their legs can find major improvements with a new therapy. During rehabilitation on a bicycle, special pads send electrical pulses that ... > watch video

Waking up Teens
Scientists Show Blue Light Can Help Reset Sleep Cycle

Teenagers' morning drowsiness is often caused by out-of-tune body clocks, in a condition known as "delayed sleep phase syndrome." Scientists now say that timing exposure to blue light -- avoiding it ... > watch video

Are You Really Paying Attention?
Doppler Sonography Helps Psychologists Measure Attention Levels

Psychologists are finding out that even when people try to focus on a task they tend to lose concentration within 40 minutes, and sometimes as little as 10 minutes. The studies are based on a new ... > watch video

Putting Everyday Products to the Test
Human-Factors Engineers Focus on User-Friendliness

Human-factors engineers -- whose training includes psychology -- specialize in testing products for usability, for example checking whether a copying machine's legs get in the way, or measuring how ... > watch video

Virtual Reality for Navigation Skills
Vision Researchers Test Theory on Visual Orientation

Vision researchers suspect that people who do not need maps to find their way may be remembering visual landmarks. To test this theory, the scientists are having volunteers navigate through a virtual ... > watch video

Why I Hate Anchovies
Exhibit Delves into Science of Taste and Smell

An exhibit at San Francisco's Exploratorium explains the science of cooking and eating, and in particular how we taste food. Our sense of taste comes from a combination of smell receptors in the nose ... > watch video

Drunk and Behind the Wheel
Simulating Impaired Reflexes Teaches Effects of Drunk Driving

Health educators can now give students a realistic taste of the perils of drunk driving, using a DUI simulator. Special go-carts delay the reaction of the brake and gas pedals and exaggerate the ... > watch video

Virtual Reality Field Trips
Psychologists, Human-Factors Engineers Design Computer-Generated Educational Outings

Psychologists Janis Cannon-Bowers and Alicia Sanchez are part of the team that created virtual reality field trips -- not just for fun, but to help children learn. Employing some of the latest ... > watch video

Mouse Adapter for Tremors
Physicists' Invention Opens Access to Computers for Persons with Tremors

For 0, people with tremors could finally be able to use a computer mouse. A new mouse adapter filters out the high-frequency, shaky component of the movement, transmitting only the steady part. ... > watch video

Inside the Preemie Brain
Incubator Enables MRI Scans on Preemies for Preventing Birth Asphyxia

Designed by a team of doctors, nurses, and engineers, a specially designed incubator allows premature babies to receive MRI scans to assess their health. The scans can measure many indicators, such ... > watch video

 
 
 

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Summaries | Headlines

Circadian Rhythms Dominate All Life Functions, According To Study (June 18, 2007) -- New research shows that the function of all genes in mammals is based on circadian -- or daily -- rhythms. The study refutes the current theory that only 10 percent to 15 percent of all genes were ... > full story

There May Be Other Causes For Childhood Brain Aneurysms (June 18, 2007) -- A new University of Cincinnati study questions the commonly held scientific belief that childhood brain aneurysms are caused by trauma, infection or underlying vascular malformations. In a ... > full story

Preimplantation Genetic Diagnosis Okay For Test-tube Babies, Study Finds (June 18, 2007) -- Children born after embryo biopsy for preimplantation genetic diagnosis do not show any more major malformations than those born after artificial reproduction technologies without ... > full story

Hot On The TRAIL Of Controlling Inflammation In Bacterial Meningitis (June 18, 2007) -- Researchers report that the molecule known as TRAIL can limit excessive immune responses in bacterial meningitis, and as such may be of use to control inflammation of the spinal cord and brain, which ... > full story

Alzheimer's-associated Enzyme Can Disrupt Neural Activity In The Brain (June 18, 2007) -- An enzyme involved in the formation of the amyloid-beta protein associated with Alzheimer's disease can also alter the mechanism by which signals are transmitted between brain cells, the disruption ... > full story

Discriminating Fact From Fiction In Recovered Memories Of Childhood Sexual Abuse (June 18, 2007) -- How accurate are recovered memories of childhood sexual abuse? Researchers have found that spontaneously recovered memories were corroborated about as often as continuous ... > full story

Banding Together: RAS Signaling Of Circadian Output (June 18, 2007) -- Scientists have finally cloned the band gene, and have found that it is an allele of ras-1. This finding posits RAS signaling as a key mediator of circadian ... > full story

Attention Training May Help Older Adults Improve Concentration (June 17, 2007) -- Can a fitness program for your brain improve thinking and concentration the way lifting weights can increase muscle strength? Early results from a new study suggest that attention training can change ... > full story

Researchers Use 'Genomic Pathway' To Predict Parkinson's (June 17, 2007) -- A new study provides strong evidence that the joint effects of common DNA variations in several genes that encode proteins within a well-defined biological pathway largely explain why some persons ... > full story

Science Student Gender Gap: A Continuing Challenge (June 17, 2007) -- Interactive classes don't necessarily solve the performance imbalance between the genders in physics classes, according to a new study that stands in stark contrast to previous physics education ... > full story

Doctor Advises Caution Over Flu Drug (June 16, 2007) -- A senior doctor advises caution over the use of the antiviral drug oseltamivir. His concern follows advice by the Japanese authorities in March 2007 against prescribing oseltamivir to adolescents ... > full story

Diet Pills: Pills Seen As Effective May Increase Users' Unhealthy Behaviors (June 16, 2007) -- Glaxo Smith Kline's Alli, the first FDA-approved over-the-counter weight loss pill, is now hitting the shelves nationwide. A new study provides applicable new insight into consumer thinking about ... > full story

< more recent summaries | earlier summaries >

Communication -- Communication is the process of exchanging information, usually via a common protocol. "Communication studies" is the academic discipline focused on communication forms, processes and meanings, ... > full article

Brain -- In animals, the brain, or encephalon, is the control center of the central nervous system. In most animals, the brain is located in the head, protected by the skull and close to the primary sensory ... > full article

Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder -- Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) (sometimes referred to as ADD for those without hyperactivity) is thought to be a neurological disorder, always present from childhood, which manifests ... > full article

Encephalopathy -- Encephalopathy is a nonspecific term describing a syndrome affecting the brain. Generally, it refers to involvement of large parts of the brain (or the whole organ), instead of identifiable changes ... > full article

Limbic system -- The limbic system is the collective name for structures in the human brain involved in emotion, motivation, and emotional association with memory. It affects motivation and is more active in ... > full article

Human brain -- The human brain is the center of the central nervous system in humans as well as the primary control center for the peripheral nervous system. The brain controls "lower" or involuntary activities ... > full article

Amygdala -- The amygdala (Latin, corpus amygdaloideum) is an almond-shape set of neurons located deep in the brain's medial temporal lobe. Shown to play a key role in the processsing of emotions, the amygdala ... > full article

Hypothalamus -- In mammals, the hypothalamus is a region of the brain located below the thalamus, forming the major portion of the ventral region of the diencephalon and functioning to regulate certain metabolic ... > full article

Central nervous system -- The central nervous system (CNS) represents the largest part of the nervous system, including the brain and the spinal cord. Together with the peripheral nervous system, it has a fundamental role in ... > full article

Spinal cord -- The spinal cord is a part of the vertebrate nervous system that is enclosed in and protected by the vertebral column (it passes through the spinal canal). It consists of nerve cells. The cord conveys ... > full article

Sensory neuron -- Sensory neurons are nerve cells within the nervous system responsible for converting external stimuli from the organism's environment into internal electrical impulses. For example, some sensory ... > full article

Pheromone -- A pheromone is any chemical produced by a living organism that transmits a message to other members of the same species. There are alarm pheromones, food trail pheromones, sex pheromones, and many ... > full article

Virtual reality -- Virtual reality (VR) is a technology which allows a user to interact with a computer-simulated environment, be it a real or imagined one. Most current virtual reality environments are primarily ... > full article

Lead poisoning -- Lead poisoning is a condition, also known as plumbism or painter's colic, caused by increased blood serum lead levels. The symptoms of lead poisoning include neurological problems, such as reduced ... > full article

Intelligence quotient -- An intelligence quotient or IQ is a score derived from a set of standardized tests developed to measure a person's cognitive abilities ("intelligence") in relation to their age group. An IQ test does ... > full article

Cognition -- The term cognition is used in several loosely related ways to refer to a faculty for the human-like processing of information, applying knowledge and changing preferences. Cognition or cognitive ... > full article

Aptitude -- An aptitude is an innate inborn ability to do a certain kind of work. Aptitudes may be physical or mental. Aptitude and intelligence quotient are related, and in some ways opposite, views of human ... > full article

Memory -- Memory is the ability of the brain to store, retain, and subsequently recall information. Although traditional studies of memory began in the realms of philosophy, the late nineteenth and early ... > full article

Mnemonic -- A mnemonic is a memory aid. Mnemonics are often verbal, something such as a very short poem or a special word used to help a person remember something. Mnemonics rely not only on repetition to ... > full article

Dementia -- Dementia is progressive decline in cognitive function due to damage or disease in the brain beyond what might be expected from normal aging. Particularly affected areas may be memory, attention, ... > full article

 
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