Morning Overview on MSN
Study finds split-second brain timing that links learning and movement
A growing body of neuroscience research is revealing that the brain’s ability to learn and its ability to move depend on the same razor-thin timing windows, sometimes as brief as 30 milliseconds.
In findings that raise a variety of questions about how our brains work, and even about the nature of consciousness, UC Santa Barbara researchers and collaborators report that only a small section of ...
In findings that raise a variety of questions about how our brains work, and even about the nature of consciousness, UC Santa Barbara researchers and collaborators report that only a small section of ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Brain’s internal compass stays stable, helping keep memories consistent
Neurons that track which direction an animal faces can hold their firing patterns steady for months, even as other brain ...
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