News

  • Evelina Fedorenko receives Troland Award from National Academy of Sciences

    Source: McGovern News | Julie Pryor, January 23, 2025] The National Academy of Sciences (NAS) announced today that McGovern Investigator Evelina Fedorenko will receive a 2025 Troland Research Award for her groundbreaking contributions towards understanding the language network in the human brain. The Troland Research Award is given annually to recognize unusual achievement by early-career researchers within the broad spectrum of […]

  • New autism research projects represent a broad range of approaches to achieving a shared goal

    Source: [Picower News, David Orenstein | November 21, 2024] At a symposium of the Simons Center for the Social Brain, six speakers described a diversity of recently launched studies aimed at improving understanding of the autistic brain. From studies of the connections between neurons, to interactions between the nervous and immune systems, to the complex […]

  • Open technology platform enables new versatility for neuroscience research with more naturalistic behavior

    System developed by MIT and Open Ephys team provides a fast, light, standardized means for combining multiple instruments with minimal hindrance of lab mouse mobility. [Source: Picower News | November 13, 2024] Individual technologies for recording and controlling neural activity in the brains of research mice have each advanced rapidly but the potential of easily […]

  • Chenjie Shen, former Simons Center Postdoctoral fellow, among 13 Recipients of 2024 Independence Awards

    The Simons Foundation is pleased to announce the latest recipients of its prestigious independence awards. The 13 talented early-career scientists will receive support as they transition from mentored training to independent research positions. Each fellow will receive up to two years of postdoctoral support with an annual salary of $85,000, plus a yearly resource and professional […]

  • MIT Center Improves Understanding of Autism and the Social Brain

    Like many big ideas, the Simons Center for the Social Brain started with conversation. In 2003, Jim and Marilyn Simons approached leaders at MIT looking for scientists studying autism. At the time, Mriganka Sur was chair of MIT’s department of brain and cognitive sciences, so he gathered a crew of scientists who, like him, studied brain development […]

  • Study reveals how an anesthesia drug induces unconsciousness

    Source: [Anne Trafton | MIT News | July 15, 2024] Propofol, a drug commonly used for general anesthesia, derails the brain’s normal balance between stability and excitability. There are many drugs that anesthesiologists can use to induce unconsciousness in patients. Exactly how these drugs cause the brain to lose consciousness has been a longstanding question, but MIT […]

  • What is language for?

    Drawing on evidence from neurobiology, cognitive science, and corpus linguistics, MIT researchers make the case that language is a tool for communication, not for thought. Source: [Jennifer Michalowski | McGovern Institute for Brain Research | July 3, 2024] Language is a defining feature of humanity, and for centuries, philosophers and scientists have contemplated its true purpose. We […]

  • Nancy Kanwisher, Robert Langer, and Sara Seager named Kavli Prize Laureates

    MIT scientists honored in each of the three Kavli Prize categories: neuroscience, nanoscience, and astrophysics, respectively. Source: [MIT News, School of Science | June 12, 2024] MIT faculty members Nancy Kanwisher, Robert Langer, and Sara Seager are among eight researchers worldwide to receive this year’s Kavli Prizes. A partnership among the Norwegian Academy of Science and […]

  • Study models how ketamine’s molecular action leads to its effects on the brain

    New research addresses a gap in understanding how ketamine’s impact on individual neurons leads to pervasive and profound changes in brain network function. Source: [David Orenstein, The Picower Institute for Learning and Memory | June 4, 2024] Ketamine, a World Health Organization Essential Medicine, is widely used at varying doses for sedation, pain control, general […]

  • Study explains why the brain can robustly recognize images, even without color

    The findings also reveal why identifying objects in black-and-white images is more difficult for individuals who were born blind and had their sight restored. Source: [Anne Trafton | MIT News | May 23, 2024] Even though the human visual system has sophisticated machinery for processing color, the brain has no problem recognizing objects in black-and-white images. A […]

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