PsyPost on MSN
Your brain being in sync with others may protect against trauma, new neuroscience research suggests
The ability to synchronize brain activity with others may serve as a protective shield against the psychological fallout of ...
Local News Matters on MSNOpinion
Growing up in fear: A researcher's view of immigration trauma in children's brains
FOR DECADES, Martin Teicher, M.D., Ph.D., has investigated the impact of trauma on the developing brain. He is currently an ...
Adolescents have long engaged in high-risk behaviors and poor decisions. Now we know that it's got a lot to do with what's ...
Nearly one in five of the 2.5 million veterans who served in Iraq and Afghanistan sustained at least one traumatic brain ...
Mass General Brigham researchers compared data from more than 75,000 adults with TBI to a control group of the same size. They studied the patients over 24 years and observed how many developed brain ...
A new study led by University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine clinical scientists and UPMC neurosurgeons challenges ...
New research from the University of Virginia School of Medicine is revealing why traumatic brain injury increases the chance of developing Alzheimer’s disease – and the discovery is pointing to a ...
Learn the new science of brain development and discover the importance of connections and learning for ongoing brain health.
In December of 1993, former World Boxing Champion John Famechon (who had sustained severe incapacitating brain injuries in August 1991) began a new, complex multi-movement therapy and rehabilitation ...
News-Medical.Net on MSN
Struggling to make ends meet may slow brain development in infants
By Dr. Liji Thomas, MD A new study shows that whether families can reliably meet basic needs, not just how much they earn, ...
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