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Difference in brain anatomy for readers The study assessed data from over 1,000 participants in their study, highlighting ...
Not according to neuroscience. Reading, science shows, doesn’t just fill your brain with information; it actually changes the way your brain works for the better as well. The short- and long ...
Sometimes the best way to understand how a “normal” brain works is to explore those that are abnormal. Such is the insight in reporter Helen Thomson’s enjoyable new book, “Unthinkable: An ...
Neurologist Pria Anand recounts curious tales of the workings of the human mind in an elegant debut that is being compared to the late, great Oliver Sacks ...
Of all the glossy photo books to showcase on your coffee table, your first choice might not be one of decaying human brains. But it should be, so long as that book is “Malformed.” The first ...
The brain is one of your most important organs. We’ll go over the different parts of the brain and explain what each one does.
What you don’t know about the brain could fill a book. That’s true even if you happen to be a brain surgeon or neuroscientist. Luckily, Zeman, a British neurologist, has painted A Portrait of ...
Of course, being a brain guy, I wanted to know how reading books impacted me on a neural level. Clearly, it was affecting my overall thought processes — but perhaps also my brain anatomy.
New techniques, including advances in brain scans, are helping to reveal the hidden anatomy of brain wiring and giving scientists a new understanding of how thoughts, memories and emotions are ...
Brain surgery itself, Marsh writes, is “something I hate doing.” Beforehand, patients are depersonalized—their heads are shaved, and they are covered in sterile drapes—although you can’t ...
Anatomy of a Scandal is not a true story, but it is based on this book. Sienna Miller stars in the hit Netflix series that’s inspired by Sarah Vaughan’s bestselling novel ...