A single dose of GLP-1 receptor agonist liraglutide produced short-term correction of a deficit in associative learning found in people with insulin insensitivity and obesity in a controlled study.
A study demonstrates that effective, intensive pain therapy is not simply a matter of administering the correct analgesic, according to an anesthesiologist.
"In simple words, the subjects were more ready for action and alert to external stimuli after having coffee," said Maria Pico-Perez of Jaume I University, Spain, and the study's first author.
we will see where it goes. i would like for you to first enlighten us in english, non-scientific english, what this is, and, second, perhaps you have responses the very important concerns dr. emmanuel raised. absolutely. yes. what we are able to do here is we take people, put them inside an mri scanner. this is much like the one you use for medical mri. we use a variant called fmri, functional mri. we reported how the brain responds to hours and hours of language. we have people listen to podcasts in the scanner for many, many years. we map out where the different ideas and words are represented in their brains. and then once we have this model built we can reverse the process. we put the people back in the scanner, these people that we built in model on. we can have them listen to a new story, try to tell a story in their head or watch a video, and