This work presents potentially important findings suggesting that a combination of transcranial stimulation approaches applied for a short period could improve memory performance after administration.
It’s not hard to understand why capys have a cultlike following on Instagram and TikTok. I fell for the giant rodent decades ...
Making Contact on MSN9d
Exposed Part 1: the Human Radiation Experiments at Hunter’s Point from SF Public PressToday we present the first half of a two-part radio documentary from our friends at SF Public Press, “Exposed,” opening a window into the little-known history of the Hunters Point Naval Shipyard. The ...
A 25-year-old virginal Japanese woman underwent surgery more than 20 years ago to remove a growth that doctors had found developing in the reproductive area of her body ... the 'clear ...
No siree, this is the real deal – a state-of-the-art indoor racing facility that’ll make you feel like a NASCAR pro, minus the million-dollar sponsorships and the risk of fiery crashes. Located in the ...
A patient with suspected brain stem glioma involving the area of the left vestibular nuclei and cerebellar ... normal bilaterally but suppression was abnormal with a noise in the left ear and probe in ...
The histogram on the left depicts the exploitability of theta and high-beta/gamma frequency features. The histogram of the right shows the scalp distribution of features within the right ...
As a result, it was found that the subjects' posterior auricular muscles were more active when the sound of the audiobook they wanted to listen to came from behind them than when the sound came ...
Similar research has already shown that the largest muscles, posterior and superior auricular muscles, react during attentive listening. Because they pull the ears up and back, they are considered ...
When sounds came from behind a participant, the posterior auricular muscles contracted as if attempting to point the ears in that direction. If you can wiggle your ears, you can use muscles that ...
Similar research had already shown that the largest muscles, posterior and superior auricular muscles, react during attentive listening. Because they pull the ears up and back, they are considered ...
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