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ZME Science on MSN
Does My Red Look Like Your Red? The Age-Old Question Just Got A Scientific Answer and It Changes How We Think About Color
This isn’t just about brain-reading party tricks. The study revealed large-scale “retinotopic color biases”. In other words, ...
While our understanding of Alzheimer’s disease is far from complete, the latest therapies, and others in more than 100 ...
The Brighterside of News on MSN
AI and eye tracking could transform how kids learn online
Children’s eyes may hold the secret to how they learn from videos, and new research suggests artificial intelligence could ...
We present an integrated approach to derive multimodal MRI markers of cognition that can be transdiagnostically linked to psychopathology. This demonstrates that the predictive ability of neural ...
In complex environments, sustained performance depends on more than technical skill or operational efficiency. Joy, when ...
Researchers developed a fully automated cooperation task showing that rats engage in true reciprocity, not just mutual ...
This meant that a model could look at the neural signals of a person and infer what colour they were viewing—even without ...
Alzheimer’s disease has proved to be a tricky target, and researchers and drug developers have been pursuing effective treatments for decades. The brains of people who die with Alzheimer’s show a ...
Psychologists are turning to artificial intelligence to uncover hidden psychological cues in speech, from word choice to tone ...
The Brighterside of News on MSN
Emotional flexibility in the brain explained through music
As emotions rise and fall in everyday life, your brain keeps up, constantly adjusting. These transitions between ...
Choices will always have consequences. They can be negative or positive, depending on the choices made by the individual.
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