From the moment they enter the world, kids are like sponges, soaking up vital lessons without needing words. They decode ...
How do we hear, and how does hearing affect how we play music? These questions are central to the work of Nikolas Alejandro Francis, 44, an assistant professor in the University of Maryland’s Biology ...
Why do we sometimes keep eating even when we're full and other times turn down food completely? Why do we crave salty things ...
New experiments reveal how astrocytes tune neuronal activity to modulate our mental and emotional states. The results suggest ...
Screens today have gone from being helpful tools to something young children depend on too much. Doctors and child experts ...
Navigating the world is no mean feat, especially when the world pushes back. For instance, airflow hitting a fly on its right side can, after a turn, become a headwind. To stay on course, the fly's ...
Although he's been dishing out this unusual parenting advice, Mellencamp said his son Hud might join the workforce soon John Mellencamp is sharing the unusual parenting advice he tells his kids The ...
The way the brain develops can shape us throughout our lives, so neuroscientists are intensely curious about how it happens. A new study by researchers in The Picower Institute for Learning and Memory ...
Jasmatia Schaefering filed for divorce from her husband in June 2024, over a decade after his professional football career ...
Dancers say their craft can’t be duplicated by AI. Our tests show they’re right — for now.
Adolescents have long engaged in high-risk behaviors and poor decisions. Now we know that it's got a lot to do with what's going on in the development of their brains.
Professor Paul Colombo has studied music-based mentoring, memory, and the benefits of music training over the course of his career at Tulane University. Here's what he found.