Morning Overview on MSN
Scientists reverse brain aging and restore memory in mice
In a groundbreaking study published on October 23, 2025, scientists have successfully reversed brain aging and memory loss in ...
ScienceAlert on MSN
New Alzheimer's Treatment Clears Plaques From Brains of Mice Within Hours
Scientists have repaired a natural gateway into the brains of mice, allowing the clumps and tangles associated with Alzheimer's disease to be swept away. After just three drug injections, mice with ...
Cedars-Sinai researchers created “young” immune cells from human stem cells that reversed cognitive decline and Alzheimer’s ...
Live Science on MSN
Scientists used AI to map uncharted areas of the mouse brain
Using a ChatGPT-like AI model, scientists have created a new map of the mouse brain that captures previously uncharted areas ...
Treating mice with a molecule that rescued autophagy and balanced neuronal excitability reduced pain behaviors, offering a ...
Discover Magazine on MSN
A Complete Brain Activity Map Now Exists, Giving us Insight to How We Make Decisions
Learn more about how researchers were able to fully map a mouse brain and give us a better understanding of how or why we make the decisions we do.
Scientists enlist AI to map regions of the brain in unprecedented detail — and that’s just the start
Researchers say artificial intelligence has helped them create one of the most detailed maps of the mouse brain to date.
Spanish and Chinese scientists say they have used nanoparticles to enable the brains of mice to clear out plaque linked to ...
A research team has found a way to restore brain communication and memory function in mice — offering real hope that ...
Futurism on MSN
Nanoparticle Treatment Reverses Alzheimer’s in Mice
Scientists have developed a nanoparticle-based treatment that successfully reversed Alzheimer's disease in mice. Scientists ...
Boulder Daily Camera on MSN
Scary movies and haunted houses: CU Boulder team studies how the brain responds to fear
Others avoid scary movies and haunted houses altogether during Halloween. In a study published in August, a team at the University of Colorado Boulder studied how people’s brains respond to threats ...
Reducing mice’s body temperature immediately after brain injury improved their motor ability and coordination during recovery.
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