the brain

schizophrenia. Illustration: shutterstock

Filtering the genetic information of schizophrenia

The brain: illustration: shutterstock

The hallmarks of the brain

Survival - in the brain

The great atrophy of the brain

The theory of "random levitation" claims that humans are able to characterize and identify whole objects even from a small part of the original image of the object. [Courtesy: © ChenPG / Fotolia]

How does the brain manage to process so much information?

Nervous System. Illustration: shutterstock

to "hack" the nervous system

Speedometer of the brain Credit: DZNE / Falko Fuhrmann

Inside our brains there is a speedometer (speedometer)

boy genius Illustration: shutterstock

Random genius / Drold A. Treffert

sleeping baby Photo: shutterstock

Why do babies forget / I am Sneed

Understand the secret of spatial orientation. May Britt Moser (right) Edward Moser and John O'Keefe. Photos: Wikimedia, UCL

Expansion on the Nobel Prize for Medicine: the brain's GPS

May-Britt Moser and Edward Moser from the University of Trodenheim in Norway, two winners of the 2014 Nobel Prize in Medicine. Photo: Wikipedia

Nobel Prize in Medicine for discovering the "GPS" of the brain

Communication between people. Illustration: shutterstock

The story that enters the brain: what happens in the head during communication between people

A woman sits by the bed of a comatose man. Illustration: shutterstock

there is someone in there? / Adrian M. Owen

Memory. Illustration: shutterstock

Memory of all things / James L. McGough and Aurora LaPorte

Focusing on the eye. Illustration: shutterstock

Thought control / Jason J. Goldman

Brain functions. Illustration: shutterstock

The New Age of the Mind / Raphael Yost and George M. Church

The main cells in the brain: in yellow neurons (nerve cells), in orange: astrocytes, gray: oligodendrocytes, in white, microglia or brain cells. Illustration: shutterstock

Open the blood-brain barrier

Social Network. Illustration: shutterstock

How Google is changing our minds / Daniel M. Wagner and Adrian P. Ward

Illustrating the two types of damage to the blood vessels that cause a stroke. Illustration: shutterstock

An electronic brain will save a human brain

Image No. 3: Brain areas essential for dreaming: damage to the areas marked in red leads to a complete absence of dreaming (of any kind) despite having a normal REM sleep. These areas are known to be important for sensory integration (the junction between the temporal (lateral) and parietal (parietal) lobes, left side), or for the perception of the self (the lower middle part of the frontal (frontal) lobe, right side).

The Dreaming Mind (Part I)

Blood Test. Illustration: shutterstock

Scientists from the USA have developed a blood test to detect Alzheimer's disease

language teaching. Illustration: shutterstock

Learning a new language changes the way the brain develops

coffee mug. Illustration: shutterstock

A journey into the subconscious - about laziness and caffeine /Roey Tsezana

Pressure chamber at Assaf Harofeh Hospital. Photo: Tel Aviv University

Pressure chamber treatment corrects brain injuries following head injuries

Brain stimulants. Illustration: shutterstock

Stimulating the brain / Gary Stix

schizophrenia. Illustration: shutterstock

Beyond symptoms / Ferris Jaber

Despite everything, marijuana is dangerous. Photo: shutterstock

without damage? / Melinda Wenner Moyer

human mind Photo: shutterstock

Big Brain: A high-resolution XNUMXD map of the human brain

the blood-brain barrier. Photo: Ben Brahim Mohammed via Wikimedia Commons

Does brain activity damage DNA?

A face expressing fear from the book "The expressions of fear in mother and beast" written by Darwin

A Journey to the Subscience - Fear / Roy Cezana