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Archives for 2013

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When Gazing Into Nothing Helps Us Remember

December 23, 2013

Trying to remember how you arranged last year’s Christmas ornaments on the tree? It turns out that blankly gazing at your empty tree could help. According to a new study, when we look even at an empty space, it cues our brain to remember the orientation of objects that previously occupied that space. Our eye […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: memory, visual

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When We See But Don’t See: Using Illusions to Test Our Perceptions

December 13, 2013

If you are driving home from work listening to a song on the radio or talking to your spouse in the car, you may miss other things happening around you – like a giant display of Christmas trees for sale or even a car on fire on a nearby street. Even if you traveled pass […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: illusion, kanizsa, perception, visual

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Holiday Blues? Identifying Markers for Anxiety in the Brain

December 5, 2013

We hear a lot about anxiety and depression around the holidays – people feeling lonely and far from family or overloaded with stress. Although we may think of anxiety and depression separately, they often go hand in hand. Scientists are now working to better understand the different types of anxiety people experience, and a new […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: anxiety, clinical, default-mode network

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Why We So Often Blame the Person and Not the Situation

November 20, 2013

When someone cuts you off in traffic, some choice words probably instantly spring to mind about the driver. You assume the person is either a bad driver, inconsiderate, rude, or worse. But what if it turns out the driver was in a hurry because his wife has just gone into labor with their first child? […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: error, social neuroscience

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Detection of Light in Blind People Illuminates Light’s Non-Visual Roles

November 9, 2013

We can detect light even if we cannot see it. And in a startling new discovery, even some totally blind people can detect light. Brief exposure to blue light triggered brain activity associated with alertness and attention – helping scientists further understand light’s role in cognition for all people. “The eye plays a dual role […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: blind, cognition, light, visual

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Pennies for Treats: Dieting Through Brain Training

October 26, 2013

What’s the first treat you pull out of your candy bag on Halloween? Probably your favorite guilty pleasure… but what if you could use pennies to train yourself to pick a candy you might not like the most but that might be healthier? A new study finds that we may be able to train our […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: decision-making, food, reward

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Sleeping for Learning: How Children and Adults Maximize Their Memory Potential

October 10, 2013

Photo credit: John Solem, UMass

It’s not quantity but quality that matters when it comes to how much sleep strengthens our memories. A growing body of research is finding that specific stages of sleep shape particular types of learning in the brain. Whether for children napping or for older adults catching z’s at night, we all rely on sleep to […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: children, memory, sleep

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Musings on Consciousness, Technology and Bioethics: Q&A with Adrian Owen

October 1, 2013

“Surely, if we are going to make judgments about whether people should be kept or alive or allowed to die after serious brain injury, it’s better if the people themselves are involved in that decision-making process, rather than others – doctors, relatives, etc. – being entirely responsible for making that decision for them.” Breakthroughs in […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: breakthroughs, coma, Consciousness, ethics

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Boost Your Brain with Aerobic Exergames

September 24, 2013

Q&A with Cay Anderson-Hanley “While exercise does not appear to be a cure-all, it is one of the strongest tools that we individually can enlist in our fight against cognitive decline and diseases of many types.” Playing video games that double as exercise can reap mental benefits above and beyond traditional exercise. In a recent […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: aging, cognition, exercise, videogames

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Navigation and Recall: Why There Are Some Places We Just Can’t Forget

September 10, 2013

Honza Groh; http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/deed.en

Even for those of us navigationally challenged, we may have vivid memories of exactly where we once saw a bad accident or a deer on the side of the road. These negative experiences boost our recall of places, according to new research. As a result, the very places we may want to forget are the […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: emotion, memory, visual

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  • Down the Rashomon Hole: Reflections on Mapping Emotions in the Brain
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Recent Posts

  • Down the Rashomon Hole: Reflections on Mapping Emotions in the Brain
  • New CNS Mentorship Program Now Open
  • New Initiatives with the Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
  • CNS 2026 Day 4 Highights
  • From Genetics to AI: Integrated Approaches to Decoding Human Language in the Brain

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