Wu Tsai Neurosciences InstituteOvjeren akaunt

@StanfordBrain

The Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute draws from multiple disciplines to understand the brain, provide treatments for brain disorders and promote brain health.

Stanford University
Vrijeme pridruživanja: listopad 2013.

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  1. Prikvačeni tweet

    A new research complex, home to the Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute and , will be accessible to the whole university community, allowing experts from different disciplines to work together in advancing human health.

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  2. The compassion movement recognizes that mindfulness - no matter how healthy - is limited, says , founder of . “In mindfulness, is implicit. And in my view, it needed to be more explicit.”

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    Optogenetics, a tool for controlling neurons with light, has given neuroscientists the ability to flip brain cells on and off more or less at will, revolutionizing neuroscience.

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    29. sij

    Our Human Brain Organogenesis course has started! Enthusiastic group of international students already doing experiments with brain in our building. Very proud of amazing instructors et al

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  5. “We first have to create this map of the developing brain but ultimately use it to understand disease,” said study author .

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  6. "Imagine if you were diagnosing and treating diabetes without tests, without sensors," Leanne Williams said. "That is what we're doing for mental health, right now."

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  7. New insights into the impact of mitochondrial burnout by Xinnan Wang and Daria Mochly-Rosen could lead to better treatments for ’s and ’s diseases.

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  8. "The magic in science happens at the interdisciplinary boundaries of a field." - Karen Parker

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  9. We don't experience life as it's happening - we always live a little bit in the past, says.

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  10. Join the Wu Tsai Institute and for a joint symposium on Feb. 11. Speakers include , Steve Ramirez and . Register here:

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  11. "Making connections between and computer science reminds me that I’m doing what I’ve always loved: exploring how something works, then finding a better way to do things." -

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  12. Through the Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute, clinical scientists not only treat patients, but are also working with basic scientists to pioneer novel treatments for psychiatric and neurological disease.

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  13. When neurologist Helen Brontë-Stewart first prescribed exercise to her patients 20 years ago, colleagues teased her that she was prescribing yoga all day long. Now , Brontë-Stewart says, “is the buzz word.”

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  14. By using injectable nanoparticles that convert sound waves into light, Guosong Hong have discovered a less invasive way to use to explore the brain.

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  15. Whether listening to the brain to interpret the language of neural signals, or developing ways to guide neural circuits, Stanford engineers are working to help patients, advance computing and better understand our brain.

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  16. Through our new fellowships for Stanford undergrads, students will join a lab and receive funds for full-time summer research. No lab experience required. Learn more:

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  17. Research led by could someday lead to new medical devices that can help people who can't speak.

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  18. After a year of using a retinal implant designed by Daniel Palanker's team, study participants with macular degeneration could read printed or on-screen letters.

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  19. “Aging is not linear. It’s not that we steadily age as we get older. It seems that aging comes in waves.” - , professor of neurology and neurological sciences

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  20. Save the date: The Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute and Stanford ChEM-H will host a joint symposium on Feb. 11. Register here:

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    Clete Kushida, neurologist and Division Chief and Medical Director of Stanford Sleep Medicine Center, discusses the physiological changes in the body that accompany sleep paralysis, dreams, hallunications and REM sleep.

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