New Materials Reduce Noise in Pacemakers, Enhancing Patient Comfort - Neuroscience News

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Pawan Upadhyay

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Dec 12, 2024, 11:15:29 AM12/12/24
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New Materials Reduce Noise in Pacemakers, Enhancing Patient Comfort - Neuroscience News
 
 
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Hello Pawan,
 
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These are the latest neuroscience research articles featured on NeuroscienceNews.com.
 
 
 
2024-12-11 18:31:15 +00:00
 
This shows a brain.A recent study explores how connections across the entire brain predict human intelligence, moving beyond traditional focus on specific brain areas like the prefrontal cortex. Using fMRI data from over 800 individuals, researchers analyzed communication between brain regions to predict fluid, crystallized, and general intelligence scores.
 
2024-12-11 18:46:54 +00:00
 
This shows a woman's face.Women who are more attuned to internal bodily signals, such as heartbeats and touch, experience orgasms more frequently and with greater satisfaction. This inward focus, known as interoception, is linked to both solo and partnered sexual encounters.
 
2024-12-11 19:13:27 +00:00
 
This shows a brain.A new study has revealed distinct features of the human hippocampus, a brain region critical for memory storage and retrieval, challenging the assumption that it functions like a scaled-up mouse brain. By analyzing living brain tissue from epilepsy patients, researchers found that human hippocampal CA3 neurons exhibit sparse yet highly reliable connections, optimizing memory storage and retrieval. Unlike rodent brains, these unique wiring patterns enable the human brain to encode associative memories with greater efficiency.
 
2024-12-11 20:52:30 +00:00
 
This shows a person and a brain.Researchers developed innovative materials to improve the performance of brain and heart pacemakers by reducing signal interference. These devices often face challenges from external electromagnetic forces, causing discomfort like headaches for patients.
 
 
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