Brain & Behavior
Whether you are a Mac person or a PC person, even the briefest exposure to the Apple logo may make you behave more creatively, according to recent...
Does coffee in a flimsy cup taste worse than coffee in a more substantial cup? Firms such as McDonalds and Starbucks spend millions of dollars every...
There is evidence that brain imaging technology is being used to interrogate suspected terrorists despite concerns that it may not be reliable, and...
Researchers from Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM) have estimated that one in six women are at risk for developing Alzheimer’s disease (AD...
In On Deep History and the Brain, Daniel Lord Smail suggests that human history can be understood as a long, unbroken sequence of snorts and sighs...
New research accepted for publication in the Journal of Psychopharmacology, demonstrates Pycnogenol, (pic-noj-en-all), an antioxidant plant extract...
It’s common knowledge that humans and other animals are able to visually judge depth because we have two eyes and the brain compares the images from...
Though they perch far apart on the avian family tree, birds with the ability to learn songs use similar brain structures to sing their tunes....
A team of researchers in Bedford, Mass. has developed a way of examining brain tissue with near-infrared light to detect signs of Alzheimer's disease...
Tests on the influence that a stress-related hormone has on learning in ground squirrels could have an impact on understanding how it influences...















