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Electronic face tattoo alerts when your brain’s working too hardElectronic face tattoos can warn when someone’s brain is working too hard. The non-permanent wireless forehead e-tattoos ...
One scientist may have cracked the code to curing Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s—using a single molecular switch.
Brad G. Smith, an ALS patient, regains communication abilities with a Neuralink implant, illustrating the potential of brain-computer interfaces in aiding speech impairments.
New research into how caffeine affects the brain may have revealed a key way that it rewires how our brains work at night.
Researchers gave participants face tattoos that can track when their brain is working too hard. Published May 29 in the Cell ...
Researchers at the University of Texas at Austin have developed a "forehead e-tattoo" – a wireless, paper-thin device that ...
The non-permanent wireless forehead e-tattoos decode brainwaves to measure mental strain, without the need for bulky headgear ...
Researchers have developed a temporary face tattoo that can read your brain and tell when it's being overworked, and they say this could have benefits for people working in high-intensity jobs.
Science Unbound on MSN3d
How Scientists Are Trying to Recreate the Human BrainImagine trying to map every wire in a supercomputer, but the supercomputer is your brain. That’s what scientists are attempting with the Connectome, and the complexity is staggering.
Researchers gave participants face tattoos that can track when their brain is working too hard. The study introduces a non-permanent wireless forehead e-tattoo that decodes brainwaves to measure ...
For the first time, we have a method for extracting proteins from preserved soft tissues like brains – which could be a ...
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