Climber Alex Honnold is set to scale one of the world's tallest buildings without any ropes or safety nets.
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How Alex Honnold's brain makes the impossible feel normal
Alex Honnold's brain shows no fear response during extreme climbing stunts. This neuroscientific insight reveals how repeated exposure rewires the perception of danger.
Obtaining clearer functional MRI data about the brain and its disorders is possible using artificial intelligence, according to Boston College researchers who report in Nature Methods that they have ...
Researchers found found that as people's arousal levels dwindle during an fMRI, such as if they become more relaxed and sleepy, resulting changes in breathing and heart rates alter blood oxygen levels ...
Women age 13-70 are needed to take part in a research study at Johns Hopkins' East Baltimore campus. Participants will be asked to complete one fMRI scan, computer tasks, questionnaires, and a saliva ...
Does anything happen in a sleeping infant's brain? Researchers say yes: a Swedish team has discovered five networks of spontaneous activity in the brains of 12 preterm infants who each (miraculously) ...
Women ages 13-70 are needed to take part in a research study at Johns Hopkins' East Baltimore campus. Participants will be asked to complete one fMRI scan, computer tasks, questionnaires, and a saliva ...
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