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Reason September 2005 Cathy Young |
Soul Survival Is "the new neuromorality" a threat to traditional views of right and wrong? |
Salon.com August 30, 2000 Andrew Brown |
Flameproof racism On the Evolutionary Psychology mailing list, dangerous ideas thrive -- without the usual online rancor and hatred. |
Salon.com February 1, 2001 Michael Joseph Gross |
Hard-wired for God? A Christian takes issue with a book claiming that religion is merely a trick of evolution... |
Technology Research News October 3, 2005 Eric Smally |
USC's Michael Arbib The Fletcher Jones Professor of Computer Science shares his views on trends in science and technology, his work, and the links between technology, neuroscience, and behavior. |
Reason May 2006 Ronald Bailey |
Separate But Equal? Can science tell us anything about religion? |
Wired August 2001 Jennifer Kahn |
Let's Make Your Head Interactive The Human Brain Project is combining wet anatomy with next-gen scanning, imaging, and networking to give neuroscience a revolutionary new tool -- the globally accessible online mind... |
Wired March 23, 2009 Jonah Lehrer |
Scientists Map the Brain, Gene by Gene I'm in the dissection room of the Allen Institute for Brain Science in Seattle, and the scientist next to me is in a hurry. |
IEEE Spectrum December 2010 Versace & Chandler |
MoNETA: A Mind Made from Memristors DARPA's new memristor-based approach to Artificial Intelligence consists of a chip that mimics how neurons process information |
Scientific American July 2009 Charles Q. Choi |
Being More Infantile May Have Led to Bigger Brains Genetic evidence suggests that juvenile traits helped separate chimps from us |
Salon.com September 30, 2002 Matthew Blakeslee |
Madison Avenue and your brain New advances in neuroscience are explaining why people just do it, exactly as they're told to, when that commercial comes on. |
IEEE Spectrum August 2012 Steve Furber |
Low-Power Chips to Model a Billion Neurons A miniature, massively parallel computer, powered by a million ARM processors, could produce the best brain simulations yet |
Psychology Today May/Jun 2007 Carlin Flora |
Gut Almighty Intuition really does come from the gut. It's also a kind of matching game based on experience. It's comforting to know you can lean on your unconscious when facing big life questions. And, even better, you've got a mind that can both listen to the gut and keep it in line. |
AskMen.com Bernard Croisile |
5 Daily Brain Exercises Many men are devoted to exercise to bulk up their bodies, but the phrase "use it or lose it" also applies to the neural pathways and connections in our brains. |
Fast Company George Lorenzo |
How The Global Hive Mind Is Teaming Up To Find A Cure For Alzheimer's Some intrepid scientists are trying to exploit the hive mind -- teaming some of the smartest computation researchers in the world. |
Entrepreneur January 2006 Mark Henricks |
Gray Matters As science unlocks more and more of your brain's secrets, learn how harnessing the power of your greatest asset can create a more productive, more persuasive, more competitive business. |
Bio-IT World February 11, 2005 Kevin Davies |
Bioinformatics on the Brain Adaptive selection: accelerated mutation rate produced humans' large brain. |
Wired August 21, 2007 Josie Glausiusz |
Holy @&%*! Author Steven Pinker Thinks We're Hardwired to Curse. The latest book The Stuff of Thought is a fascinating look at how language provides a window into the deepest functioning of the human brain. |
Fast Company Chris Gayomali |
Do Brainpower Apps Really Make You Smarter? Along with Lumosity and CogniFit, Fit Brains Trainer is one of the key players in the market for cognitive-training platforms ostensibly designed to keep your mind sharp. |
HBS Working Knowledge February 11, 2013 Carmen Nobel |
Neuroeconomics: Eyes, Brain, Business Economists have been paying increasing attention to how the brain works. Christine Looser discusses her research on how the brain detects aliveness and the possible implications for organizations and advertisers. |
Wired January 18, 2008 Thomas Hayden |
Why Things Suck: Science Science makes us look like bit players in the Big Story of the universe, and it exposes some key limitations of the human brain. |
BusinessWeek April 19, 2004 Joan O'C. Hamilton |
Journey To The Center Of The Mind "Functional" MRI is yielding a clearer picture of what thoughts look like |
Wired May 19, 2008 Daniel Carlat |
Brain Scans as Mind Readers? Don't Believe the Hype Can Spect scans of the brain really show our mind in action, or are we allowing ourselves to be seduced by images that may actually tell us very little? |
Scientific American September 2007 Michelle Press |
Cyclic Universe -- World of Words -- Nuclear Terror The new book Endless Universe: Beyond the Big Bang contends that the big bang will happen again... Steven Pinker discusses why we choose to use certain words in his book The Stuff of Thought... Tracking the proliferation of nuclear weapons... |
Geotimes March 2006 Bergstrom & Lipsitch |
Evolution Lessons From Infectious Diseases Even though the critics of evolutionary biology rarely dispute examples of microbial evolution on human timescales, the public appears largely unaware of the importance and success of evolutionary biology in dealing with human disease. |
Inc. September 1, 2002 Thea Singer |
The Innovation Factor: Your Brain on Innovation Want to know what makes a creative genius tick? Neuroscience gives us some clues. |
Registered Rep. August 1, 2005 Ruth Halcomb |
Tame Your Inner Lizard An interview with Terry Burnham, a former economist at Harvard who applies biology to the financial markets, says the problem is that the human brain was shaped in the Pleistocene era, back when humans had to forage for food, sabotaging our investing instincts. |
AskMen.com Lewis Howes |
Money & Happiness How money affects your mind & body. |
PC Magazine July 4, 2008 Logan Kugler |
Understanding the Brain As much as we know about the human brain, there's just as much we don't know. |
Scientific American January 9, 2006 Philip E. Ross |
Half-Brained Schemes If halving the brain of an epileptic child can suppress debilitating seizures without interfering with the development of normal intellectual abilities, what's all that gray matter good for, anyway? |
Psychology Today Nov/Dec 2008 Scott Barry Kaufman |
Confessions of a Late Bloomer We have fixed notions about the time course of success and the nature of talent that encourage us to write off the very people who are most likely to (eventually) change the world. |
Popular Mechanics July 7, 2008 Erik Sofge |
For Future of Mind Control, Robot-Monkey Trials Are Just a Start A study in the journal Nature this spring all but confirmed the latest evolution in the hard-charging, heady field of cybernetics: Monkeys can control machines with their brains. |
Teacher Magazine May 2000 |
Brainiacs While fanfare may feed the egos of brain researchers, it worries them, too. According to some scientists, brain research is being oversimplified, misinterpreted, and, most troubling, misapplied. |
BusinessWeek July 23, 2007 Jena McGregor |
The Business Brain In Close-Up Can neuroscience offer insights into the 'soft' art of leadership? |
BusinessWeek January 16, 2006 Arlene Weintraub |
What's Ethical And What Isn't? The debate over using human cells in animals for medical research. |