Back in June, we launched our Thinkfood Recipe of the Week program, to bring a brain healthy recipe to your inbox each week. Today we are pleased to announce that the physical cookbook is here and available for purchase on our website and on Amazon.com! ThinkFood is a cookbook that features brain-healthy recipes. We know [...]
Tags: book, brain health, brain healthy eating, diet, food, gifts, nutrition, recipe, ThinkFood
Posted August 31, 2010 by Sharon Delman under Neuroscience, Odds and Ends
Our eyes take in a lot of information from the world, but limitations in brain processing means that we can only pay attention to a small portion of it. As a consequence we often fail to notice important information that is clearly in our field of view because our attention is focused elsewhere. One compelling [...]
Tags: crash risk, DriveSharp, Driving, driving safety, UFOV, useful field of view
Posted August 30, 2010 by Peter Delahunt under Brain exercise, Brain plasticity, DriveSharp, Driving, Driving safety, Neuroscience, Processing speed, Research studies
Many people think that eating nuts is good for your brain. This is true, but not all nuts are created equally. There is great variation in the health benefits to be found in different types of nuts, especially from a brain health perspective. Walnuts are the top nut for brain health. They have a significantly [...]
Tags: almonds, brain healthy eating, brain healthy lifestyle, DHA, food, hazelnuts, nuts, omega-3, Parkinson's, peanuts, vitamin E, walnuts
Posted August 25, 2010 by Karen Merzenich under Neuroscience, Research studies
Gregory Berns’ book Iconoclast highlight’s the brain’s role in invention and innovation … altering perception can lead to breakthroughs.
Tags: art, chihuly, gregory berns, howard armstrong, iconoclast, innovation, invention
Posted August 24, 2010 by Steven Aldrich under Neuroscience, Odds and Ends
Five neuroscientists are on a rafting trip in Utah… does this sound the beginning of a joke? It’s not. The New York Times published an interesting article on a group of neuroscientists who want to understand how our use of digital devices affects how we think and behave. The neuroscientists were also trying to understand [...]
Tags: digital devices, distraction, nature, neuroscientists, new york times, technology, utah
Posted August 23, 2010 by Sharon Delman under Neuroscience, Odds and Ends
The New York Times published a very interesting article describing a new study that suggests that brain trauma–like concussions and other head injuries–can over time cause damage that looks like Lou Gehrig’s disease (Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, or ALS). This might mean that some people diagnosed with ALS actually are suffering from the long-term effects of [...]
Tags: ALS, concussion, Lou Gehrig's, TBI
Posted August 20, 2010 by Henry Mahncke under Neuroscience
This week, we learned that Brain Plasticity Inc. (BPI), a new “technology incubator”, has received $3.65 million from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to conduct research on software-based programs. They have been awarded $3 million to work on creating and testing a cognitive program for people with schizophrenia, as well as $650,000 for people [...]
Tags: BPI, Brain plasticity, development, funding, hemi-neglect, nih, research, schizophrenia, software, stroke, technology
Posted August 19, 2010 by Karen Merzenich under Brain exercise, Brain plasticity, Neuroscience, Research studies
Studying and actively listening to music develops the brain in ways that help beyond just enjoying music.
Tags: music, music therapy, musicophilia, plasticity
Posted August 18, 2010 by Steven Aldrich under Brain exercise, Evolution of the Brain, Research studies
Do you ever read about a study that’s received a million dollar grant and think, “Who would spend a million dollars to study THAT? And what kind of scientists would want to spend their time on it?” That’s what I first thought when I heard about research on sea slug brains. I couldn’t figure out [...]
Tags: Aplysia californica, brain function, Eric Kandel, Memory, scientific studies, sea slugs
Posted August 17, 2010 by Marghi Merzenich under Evolution of the Brain, Memory, Neuroscience, Research studies
Improving the speed and accuracy of processing what you see is gaining traction thanks to insurance carriers and increasing public awareness.
Tags: AAA, allstate, auto insurance, insurance, state farm, The Hartford
Posted August 12, 2010 by Steven Aldrich under DriveSharp, Driving, Driving safety, Neuroscience, Processing speed, Research studies