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https://www.naturalnews.com/brain.html Brain health is important for maintaining overall wellness, and there are several natural remedies that can help to support the health of your brain. Natural News offers many articles, videos, and resources to help you learn more about how to keep your brain healthy and functioning optimally. Some of our top stories explore topics such as the benefits of meditation, the power of nutrition in brain health, and how to use supplements to support better brain function. Additionally, we have articles that discuss the latest research about the brain, including the effects of aging on the brain and the potential for regenerative therapies. Our videos provide an in-depth look into the brain and how it works, as well as interviews with experts in the field of brain health. Finally, we offer resources to help you find products, supplements, and services that can help you support your brain health.
Researchers from the University of Montpellier, the University of Zurich, Naturhistorisches Museum Bern, and other institutions have found that breed function and behavior correlate with relative endocranial volume (REV) in domestic dogs.
A team of neurologists, bioengineers and radiologists has found that two neurons in the human brain that code for dopamine production have to work harder than similar cells in primate relatives. The group has posted a paper describing their work on the bioRxiv preprint server.
About 150 years after the first picture of the thalamus by Luys (1873), revealing the centre median nucleus (red), a new advanced architectural description of nuclear and fiber systems of deep brain, relying on MRI, is freely available to the scientific community, in a transdisciplinary approach.
Humans, it turns out, possess much higher metabolic rates than other mammals, including our close relatives, apes and chimpanzees, finds a Harvard study. Having both high resting and active metabolism, researchers say, enabled our hunter-gatherer ancestors to get all the food they needed while also growing bigger brains, living longer, and increasing their rates of reproduction.
Researchers led by Dr. Alexandros Karakostis from the Institute for Archaeological Science and the Senckenberg Center for Human Evolution and Palaeoenvironment at the University of Tübingen suggest that changes in the brain could have enabled early humans to use tools with precision, thus setting in motion the biocultural evolution that led to today's humans.
Assumptions that may seem self-evident are not always accurate when it comes to the evolution of vertebrate brains. Researchers at the University of Bayreuth have now demonstrated this by examining the largest neuron in the brains of blind Mexican cavefish. Their findings have been published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
As artificial intelligence (AI) becomes more common and sophisticated, its effects on human lives and societies raises new questions. A new paper published in The Quarterly Review of Biology posits how these new technologies might affect human evolution.
Research published in Nature Ecology & Evolution introduces a novel method for inferring DNA methylation patterns in non-skeletal tissues from ancient specimens, providing new insights into human evolution. As DNA methylation is a key marker of gene expression, this work allows scientists to explore changes in gene activity in the brain and other tissues that are typically absent from the fossil record.
A new review was published in Aging (listed by MEDLINE/PubMed as "Aging (Albany NY)" and "Aging-US" by Web of Science), on October 29, 2024, Volume 16, Issue 20, titled, "Brain aging and Alzheimer's disease, a perspective from non-human primates."