A new study from the School of Neurobiology, Biochemistry, and Biophysics reveals a surprising insight into the operation of ...
More than a century ago, Pavlov trained his dog to associate the sound of a bell with food. Ever since, scientists have assumed the dog learned this through repetition. The more times the dog heard ...
New research on heart rate variability suggests that composure isn’t a personality trait. It’s a physiological skill the nervous system can train—one that may determine who thrives when the stakes are ...
A study finds that people who did one specific form of brain training in the 1990s were less likely to be diagnosed with ...
More than a century ago, Pavlov trained his dog to associate the sound of a bell with food. Ever since, scientists assumed the dog learned this through repetition: The more times the dog heard the ...
Human hands are a wonder of nature and unmatched in the animal kingdom. They can twist caps, flick switches, handle tiny objects with ease, and perform thousands of tasks every day. Robot hands ...
Your brain might be lying to you about your new robotic leg. New research shows that users often think they're walking much ...
Abstract: Generalized zero-shot learning aims to recognize both seen and unseen classes with the help of semantic information that is shared among different classes. It inevitably requires consistent ...
A University of Michigan AI model diagnoses more than 50 brain disorders from MRI scans in seconds, with up to 97.5 percent ...
Psychedelics can quiet the brain’s visual input system, pushing it to replace missing details with vivid fragments from ...
Abstract: Long-term sports assessment is a challenging task in video understanding since it requires judging complex movement variations and action-music coordination. However, there is no direct ...
New research shows how psychedelics alter visual processing and boost memory-linked brain circuits to generate hallucinations, revealing mechanisms with therapeutic implications.