Art and science can be aligned in different ways. We describe one use of art as a tool: using ambiguity to evoke curiosity.
Contemporary Indian artists are combining textile with other mediums and disciplines to explore personal histories, question gender roles and respond to a changing world ...
Neuralink selected the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine as its second site to conduct clinical trials on the ...
Past research suggests that meditation and exposure to art or nature can positively impact people's well-being and brain health, in some cases even reducing stress and supporting the processing of ...
Michael Strahan and his daughters Isabella and Sophia open up in this week's PEOPLE cover story about Isabella's strength and resilience in battling a brain tumor ... a Stunning Art Piece Flights ...
When a child develops a brain tumor, early diagnosis is essential. Alan Cohen, M.D., director of pediatric neurosurgery at Johns Hopkins Children’s Center, shares the most common signs and symptoms ...
During the post-mortem, his brain and part of his spinal cord were ... held at the Max Planck Society in Germany. The aim of the project is to identify all the victims and to commemorate them ...
The blocks included (1) nature videos, (2) AI-generated digital art (“machine hallucinations” by Refik Anadol), and (3) videos of NASA Webb-produced images of galactic nebulas. Brain oxygen-level ...
For years now, brain-computer interfaces (BCI) have incrementally advanced, giving people with spinal injuries or lost limbs the ability to control prosthetics and computer cursors using their ...
Celebrated power historian Robert Greene joins MSNBC’s Ari Melber for a wide-ranging, in depth discussion on power in the year 2025; lessons from movements that built out support after electoral ...
Your brain has a lot of work to do, constantly balancing tasks while conserving energy. If you understand how the human brain decides what to pay attention to—and what to ignore—your public ...
“Even low-level exposure that people think is safe enough for public health is doing something at the brain level,” says Megan Herting, a neuroscientist at the University of Southern ...