Robert J. and Nancy D. Carney Institute for Brain Science
News
426
Results based on your selections.
A team of researchers at Brown University’s Carney Institute for Brain Science has mapped the neural circuits that are key for forming memories of sensory cues associated with alcohol.
June 25, 2020
News from Brown
In the lab or on the web, research-based courses teach students to think like scientists
This spring, a series of course-based research experiences — or CUREs — explored what it means to conduct scientific research in a virtual world.
June 25, 2020
News from Brown
Scientists devise new ‘bar code’ method to identify critical cell types in the brain
A discovery by researchers at Brown’s Center for Translational Neuroscience could pave the way for future studies aimed at developing solutions to ALS and other vexing neuromuscular diseases.
Recent neuroscience alumnus receives inaugural Carney Reproducible Paper Prize
Brown University had just released its Virtual Degree Conferral program when graduating senior Logan Cho learned he received the inaugural Carney Institute for Brain Science Reproducible Paper Prize. The $750 award honors innovations in reproducibility of publications.
Link between ALS and Alzheimer's disease can help advance the search for new therapies
On the surface, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and Alzheimer's disease share two commonalities: Both are progressively debilitating neurodegenerative conditions--meaning symptoms get worse--and, at least for now, neither has an effective treatment, let alone a cure.
Carney statement on racial injustice
The following is a statement from the directors of the Carney Institute for Brain Science to members of the institute's community.
Upstarts: When two undergraduates thought they’d found a way to stop neurodegeneration, they took action
Deadly diseases don’t wait. Neither should good ideas. So when two undergraduates thought they’d found a way to stop neurodegeneration, they took action.
Teaching assistants go the extra mile to enable remote learning
When Brown University transitioned to online learning in March due to the COVID-19 pandemic, graduate and undergraduate student teaching assistants grappled with transitioning the courses they supported, and their own studies, to a new learning environment.
Perspective: Emotional appeals increase social distancing behaviors during the COVID-19 pandemic
If fearful emotions don’t encourage people to self-isolate, why did the fear message work?
May 13, 2020
News from Brown
Study finds low proportion of individuals with autism receive recommended genetic tests
Tests can identify or rule out abnormalities, but a study from the R.I. Consortium for Autism Research and Treatment finds that most people with autism spectrum disorder don’t receive them.
May 6, 2020
News from Brown
Brown research teams mobilize to investigate COVID-19 solutions
Brown’s new COVID-19 Research Seed Fund is supporting 15 teams of faculty researchers who are working rapidly to develop solutions that could impact the world’s response to the pandemic.
May 1, 2020
News from Brown
Anxiety impairs judgment in social situations, study finds
A new study by three Brown researchers found that those who report symptoms of anxiety have a harder time walking away from people who become increasingly untrustworthy.
Understanding the origins of age-related disease
By 2040, approximately one in five people in the U.S. will be 65 years old or older. As Americans are increasingly dealing with age-related diseases such as diabetes, heart disease, stroke, and Alzheimer’s, Brown researchers are trying to understand why aging occurs in an attempt to meet the country’s growing health care needs.
DNA-grabbing protein flips a calcium channel switch that contributes to chronic pain
Scientists at the Carney Institute for Brain Science have identified one way that a synaptic calcium channel protein in sensory neurons is modulated, providing insight into mechanisms that contribute to chronic pain. The research has the potential to inform new therapeutic targets for abnormal pain conditions.
April 24, 2020
News from Brown
Three Brown professors elected to American Academy of Arts and Sciences
With their election to the prestigious honor society, Carl Kaestle, Diane Lipscombe and Susanna Loeb join the nation’s leading scholars in science, public affairs, business, arts and humanities.
Brown alumnus named 2020 Paul & Daisy Soros Fellow
A Brown University alumnus, who is now a medical student, has been named a 2020 Paul & Daisy Soros Fellow. Mark Aurel Nagy will receive up to $90,000 in funding over two years through the program, which honors immigrants and children of immigrants pursuing graduate degrees.
April 8, 2020
News from Brown
Brown honors accomplished and early-career scholars
Each year, the Research Achievement Awards recognize the research and scholarship of both longtime and early-career faculty members from a wide array of academic disciplines.
Podcast: How recurrence helps vision
Thomas and I discuss the role of recurrence in visual cognition: how brains somehow excel with so few “layers” compared to deep nets, how feedback recurrence can underlie visual reasoning, how LSTM gate-like processing could explain the function of canonical cortical microcircuits, the current limitations of deep learning networks like adversarial examples, and a bit of history in modeling our hierarchical visual system, including his work with the HMAX model and interacting with the deep learning folks as convolutional neural networks were being developed.
Perspective: Loss of smell and the COVID-19 pandemic
As SARS-CoV-2 spreads across the globe, physicians and public health officials are desperate for new tools to identify infections early. An exciting possibility comes from anecdotal evidence that links COVID-19 to the loss of smell.
Researchers identify receptor activation mechanism crucial to nervous system development
A new study has uncovered a mechanism that is one piece of the puzzle that allows the brain and central nervous system to self-assemble during development. These findings could help scientists develop potential therapies for central nervous system injuries.
Study delves into the neural basis of why autism often causes hypersensitivity to touch, sound
A new study by researchers from Brown University’s Carney Institute for Brain Science and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology found that a neural circuit underlies the hypersensitivity that is characteristic to autism spectrum disorder, identifying potential targets for therapies.
Community Spotlight: Deborah Murphy
When the COVID-19 crisis sent Brown University’s staff, faculty and students home to facilitate social distancing, Deborah Murphy fired up her sewing machine and stitched more than 100 protective masks for family, friends and members of the Carney Institute for Brain Science community.
March 19, 2020
News from Brown
With Ritalin and similar medications, the brain focuses on benefits instead of costs of work, study finds
New research from cognitive neuroscientists at Brown and Radboud Universities has pinpointed how stimulants such as Ritalin and Adderall can change people’s motivation to complete difficult tasks.
Guest Column: Why do we sleep?
Scientists often struggle with the big “why” questions, and that has been the case for sleep researchers. Answers to the why sleep question, however, have been revealing themselves more and more as basic, behavioral and clinical science probing sleep function become more available and intense.