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Sciencing on MSNHere's Why Some People Can Wiggle Their Ears But Others Can't
There's a chance you've seen people wiggle their ears and thought it's a neat trick. But that's actually the result of many ...
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PsyPost on MSNDopamine’s stronghold is the striatum, not the cortex, brain imaging study suggests
A new study published in Diagnostics provides evidence that the striatum, rather than the cerebral cortex, receives the highest concentration of dopamine input in the brain. Advanced confocal imaging ...
Researchers found that the uncinate fasciculus, a tract tied to emotion and memory, strongly correlated with dominance behaviors in squirrel monkeys.
A new study led by investigators from Mass General Brigham trialed stereotactic (targeted) brain-directed radiation in 100 patients with small cell lung cancer and brain metastases, finding they ...
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So You Think You Can Dance Turns 20: Two Superfans Revisit the Routine They’re Still Obsessed With
Today marks 20 years since So You Think You Can Dance‘s series premiere. Yep, it’s been two decades since the first time ...
A side-by-side comparison of the brains of a horseshoe crab (left), the Mollisonia fossil (center) and a modern spider (right) reveal the surprising findings of this study: The organization of ...
Several people were wounded in the shooting, which erupted in the early hours of July 4. One person died at a local hospital.
Abdiwali Isaak, 18, was killed and three others injured in a shooting June 28 on Columbus' West Side, police said.
The adult brain still carries stem cells that grow, divide, and eventually become new mature neurons.
You can be dancing with yourself while you are just dancing with someone else, too. Regardless, getting in motion with music is good for your brain, body, and beyond.
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