Depression Isn’t Just Crying: What It Really Looks Like

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Summary: A study from West Virginia University examines how employees with depression decide whether and how to disclose their condition at work, identifying eight distinct strategies along a disclosure continuum. Source: West Virginia University Employees who experience depression often face a difficult choice: whether to disclose their condition at work, and if so, how much … Read more

Scientists Close In on Memory’s Molecular Basis

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Summary: Researchers report new molecular details about memory formation, showing how CaMKII binding sites organize actin filaments into rigid bundles that form the structural backbone of dendritic spines. Source: Rice University New insight into a longstanding puzzle — how memory can be encoded and maintained — comes from a multidisciplinary team that characterized how neuronal … Read more

Noninvasive Technique Controls Molecule Size to Cross the BBB

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Innovative ultrasound method uses acoustic pressure to control which molecules cross the blood-brain barrier—potentially improving treatments for central nervous system disorders such as Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s. A research team led by Elisa Konofagou, professor of biomedical engineering and radiology at Columbia Engineering, has demonstrated for the first time that the size of molecules that penetrate … Read more

How TENS Therapy Reduces Fibromyalgia Pain and Fatigue

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Summary: For millions living with fibromyalgia, exercise is both essential and difficult: movement often brings intense pain and overwhelming fatigue. A large, real-world clinical trial now shows a simple, drug-free option that helps—adding TENS (transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation) to standard outpatient physical therapy significantly reduced movement-evoked pain and, importantly, fatigue. In the multicenter FM-TIPS trial, … Read more

Adult-Born Neurons Grow Larger Than Neurons Born in Infancy

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Summary: Neurons generated during adult neurogenesis in the dentate gyrus continue to grow and mature over many months, becoming larger and more complex than neurons born in infancy. These long-maturing adult-born neurons likely contribute disproportionately to hippocampal plasticity and may serve distinct functional roles throughout life. Source: SfN Adult-born neurons continue developing for months and … Read more

Managing Insomnia in Autistic Adults

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Summary: Targeted sleep therapy for autistic adults shows encouraging results, with reductions in insomnia symptoms and related anxiety. Source: La Trobe University La Trobe University researchers have completed the first pilot study worldwide testing a sleep-focused intervention specifically adapted for autistic adults. The findings point to meaningful reductions in insomnia severity and improvements in co-occurring … Read more

Favorite Music Boosts Neuroplasticity in Alzheimer’s Patients

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Summary: Repeated listening to personally meaningful music promotes brain plasticity and improves cognitive performance in people with mild cognitive impairment and early-stage Alzheimer’s disease. Source: University of Toronto Researchers at the University of Toronto and Unity Health Toronto report that repeated exposure to personally meaningful music can induce beneficial changes in the brain and improve … Read more

CRISPR-Edited Stem Cells Offer New Hope for Arthritis

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Summary: Researchers have used CRISPR gene-editing to reprogram stem cells so they can detect joint inflammation and produce an anti-inflammatory biologic to combat arthritis. Source: WUSTL. Goal is a vaccine-like therapy that targets inflammation in joints Scientists have engineered mouse stem cells using CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing to create cells that sense inflammatory signals and respond … Read more

Discover If Your Name Matches Your Face

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Summary: Researchers examined whether people are judged more positively and even rewarded at the ballot box when their name matches the shape of their face. Source: Springer. New research finds that a well-matched name and face can help a politician win more votes. Researchers David Barton and Jamin Halberstadt of the University of Otago in … Read more

Why Problem Solving Shapes Sensory Processing

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Different regions of the brain specialize in processing distinct aspects of our sensory experiences. How those cortical areas communicate and route sensory signals to support perception and behavior has been a longstanding question in neuroscience. By studying touch in mice, researchers at the University of Zurich demonstrate that the flow of sensory information from one … Read more