Rabu, 29 Desember 2010

Mind & Brain: 100 Trillion Connections: New Efforts Probe and Map the Brain's Detailed Architecture

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Mind & Brain
Scientific American Magazine | Mind & Brain
100 Trillion Connections: New Efforts Probe and Map the Brain's Detailed Architecture (Preview)
The noise of billions of brain cells trying to communicate with one another may hold a crucial clue to understanding consciousness
By Carl Zimmer
Scientific American Magazine | Mind & Brain
Microbubbles Used to Breach the Blood-Brain Barrier
Tiny bubbles may help lifesaving drugs cross a crucial boundary
By Jeneen Interlandi
Scientific American Mind | More Science
What Attachment Theory Can Teach about Love and Relationships
The surprising secrets to finding the right partner for a healthy relationship
By Amir Levine and Rachel S. F. Heller
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Cross-check | More Science
New Year's Resolution: I will believe in free will
Choice is an emergent, psychological phenomenon that cannot be understood in terms of physics and other strictly physical sciences
By John Horgan
Bering in Mind | Evolution
God's little rabbits: Religious people out-reproduce secular ones by a landslide
One reason why God isn’t going anywhere anytime soon
By Jesse Bering
Features | Mind & Brain
Can You Live Forever? Maybe Not--But You Can Have Fun Trying
In this chapter from his new e-book, journalist Carl Zimmer tries to reconcile the visions of techno-immortalists with the exigencies imposed by real-world biology
By Carl Zimmer
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Mind Matters | Mind & Brain
Slipping the 'Cognitive Straitjacket' of Psychiatric Diagnosis
Psychiatry's diagnostic bible meets the awkward facts of genetics
By Steven E. Hyman
News | Energy & Sustainability
Behavior Frontiers: Can Social Science Combat Climate Change?
Scientists remove some of the guesswork about how individuals will use energy in 2050 by looking at past campaigns to induce personal change and their effectiveness
By Lisa Palmer
Observations | Evolution
Fossilized food stuck in Neandertal teeth indicates plant-rich diet
That some of the starches were cooked also suggests that Neandertals engaged in fairly complex food gathering and preparation
By Katherine Harmon
Scientific American Mind | More Science
Why do I get a slump in mental energy after eating a meal?
Paul Li, lecturer of cognitive science at the University of California, Berkeley, offers an explanation
By Paul Li
Scientific American Magazine | More Science
The Bright Spots of Kids' TV
Four programs may help stimulate an early interest in the sciences
By Lauren Rubenzahl

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