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How We Map Our Bodies from Infancy

August 11, 2015

I recently found myself in a touch tunnel at a science museum. Basically in pitch darkness in a box, I had to feel my way through a maze of turns. As I did so, I found myself often thinking about my arms’ position relative to not just the tunnel but to each other and the rest of […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized

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How We Sharpen Attention on the Fly in Response to Incentives

July 28, 2015

A simple trip to the grocery store can be an exercise in trying to keep your attention focused on a task. You may have a list of items you need to buy but have a constant barrage of sale signs and displays enticing you to reward yourself. How do these incentives affect our attention? A […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized

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Judgments of Competence Affect Anticipation of Pain

July 22, 2015

Picking a new dentist or doctor can be harrowing experience. Internet reviews and word of mouth may help, but oftentimes it comes down to first impressions, maybe even just a photo online. A new study shows that these impressions of people’s competence actually affect our anticipation of pain. “The goal of this study was to […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized

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Distinguishing Consonant Sounds in Noise Predicts Reading Ability in Preschoolers

July 15, 2015

When babies are born, they undergo a hearing test with a simple little machine. What if one day that test could also predict how well a child will be able to read and identify those children early may need extra help? A new study has taken a crucial first step toward that possibility. In PLOS […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized

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Patterns of Brain Activity Match Vividness of Memories

July 14, 2015

InsideOut_Pixar_memory-1024x579

Pixar’s Inside Out portrays memories as glowing individual spheres that we replay in our minds like a movie on a projector screen. But in real life, neuroscientists have found that memories are not compartmentalized into perfect little bubbles; they are represented over a largely distributed set of brain regions. And the same brain regions at […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: fMRI, inside out, memory

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Evidence from Tone Deafness: Limiting Musical Exposure Can Deteriorate the Auditory System

June 30, 2015

Often thought of in pop culture as a funny quirk (think: Cameron Diaz singing karaoke in My Best Friend’s Wedding), tone deafness is actually a brain disorder. Whereas most of us derive great pleasure from music, someone who is tone deaf may hear music as a noisy din and may even avoid situations where music […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: EEG, music, nina kraus

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Creating a Bigger Bubble: What Happens When People Invade Our Personal Space

June 19, 2015

It’s a hot summer day and you are crammed onto a commuter train. So you may take measures to cope with the uncomfortable closeness of strangers: Perhaps you put in earbuds or read a book, or perhaps you just avoid eye contact and turn away. All of these actions change how we focus our attention […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized

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How You Predict the Future Every Day

June 8, 2015

http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Boule_de_cristal.jpg

We all predict the future every time we listen to someone speak or read a book. If I say “barbed,” for example, what word comes next? How about “undivided”? (see answers below, along with other top word pairings) The ability to predict words helps us take mental shortcuts in language. And a new study finds […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized

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Chocolate Smells Pink and Stripy: Synesthesia and Smells

May 30, 2015

For one person, chocolate smells pinky and stripy, for another it was a hazy mist. These were not smell associations – the images are how some people actually experience the smell of chocolate. The people drawing the images have a rare form of synesthesia, in which a smell elicits a color. And in a new […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized

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The Neuroscience of Trauma from Sexual Assault

May 26, 2015

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Flickr_-_Official_U.S._Navy_Imagery_-_A_sexual_assault_awareness_poster._(2).jpg

Guest Post by Kathryn Gigler, Northwestern University “I believe that you believe something happened to you.” The young woman repeated the detective’s statement to me again. It had been the detective’s response to her question of whether he believed her account of the brutal sexual assault she had experienced the past weekend. As a counselor […]

By lmunoz Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: huffington post, ptsd, sexual assault, stress

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