Muscle-controlling Neurons Know When They Mess Up, According to Penn Research
Friday, February 7, 2014 · Posted by The University of Pennsylvania
Whether either or both of these explanations are confirmed, the fact that individual Purkinje cells are able to distinguish when their corresponding muscle neurons encounter an error must be taken into account in future studies of fine motor control. This understanding could lead to new research into the fundamentals of neuroplasticity and learning.
New Hope for Victims of Traumatic Brain Injury
Monday, November 18, 2013 · Posted by American Friends of Tel Aviv University
Evidence that hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) should repair chronically impaired brain functions and significantly improve the quality of life of mild TBI patients. The new findings challenge the often-dismissive stand of the US Food and Drug Administration, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the medical community at large, and offer new hope where there was none.
New Theory of Synapse Formation in the Brain
Thursday, October 10, 2013 · Posted by Forschungszentrum Juelich
Jülich neuroinformatician Dr. Markus Butz has now been able to ascribe the formation of new neural networks in the visual cortex to a simple homeostatic rule that is also the basis of many other self-regulating processes in nature. With this explanation, he and his colleague Dr. Arjen van Ooyen from Amsterdam also provide a new theory on the plasticity of the brain – and a novel approach to understanding learning processes and treating brain injuries and diseases.
Teenagers’ brains affected by preterm birth
Tuesday, November 13, 2012 · Posted by University of Adelaide
New research at the University of Adelaide has demonstrated that teenagers born prematurely may suffer brain development problems that directly affect their memory and learning abilities.