The Transmitter: Neuroscience News and Perspectives
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Protein aggregates gum up ‘master regulator’ of autism-linked genes
Digitization of ‘breathtaking’ neuroanatomy slide collection offers untapped research gold mine
Neuroscientists need to do better at explaining basic mental health research
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”The number of non-model species available for doing comparative studies is breathtaking. — JAMES HANKEN, RESEARCH PROFESSOR OF BIOLOGY, HARVARD UNIVERSITY AND CURATOR, MUSEUM OF COMPARATIVE ZOOLOGY
What textbooks would you recommend for either an undergrad or grad level neuroethology course? #neuroethology @neuroethology.org
— Drew Schreiner (@schreinerdrew.bsky.social) January 22, 2025 at 10:28 AM
Protein aggregates gum up ‘master regulator’ of autism-linked genes
X marks the spot in search for autism variants
Upcoming Online Seminars
Why practical summer courses in neuroscience matter
In your New Year’s resolutions for 2025, consider public outreach
Dose, scan, repeat: Tracking the neurological effects of oral contraceptives
Cracking the code of the extracellular matrix
My hope for displaced Ukrainian children with autism, an update
A scientific fraud. An investigation. A lab in recovery.
Science is built on trust. What happens when someone destroys it?
Putting a bright idea to the test
A surprising wave of findings in mice suggests that light and sound flickering at 40 hertz clears the brain of Alzheimer’s-disease-linked plaques. Several companies are hoping to prove it works in people.
From bench to bot: How important is prompt engineering?
From bench to bot: Does AI really make you a more efficient writer?
From bench to bot: Boost your writing with AI personas
Sniffing out the mysteries of olfaction
A background in physics, and his own curiosity, have helped Dmitry Rinberg tackle the complexities of the neuroscience of smell.
Timothy Ryan on his pivotal switch from studying particle physics to decoding synaptic transmission
Biosensors and being fearless with Lin Tian
To keep or not to keep: Neurophysiology’s data dilemma
The S-index Challenge: Develop a metric to quantify data-sharing success
A README for open neuroscience
Open-access neuroscience comes to the classroom: Q&A with Liz Kirby
What makes memories last—dynamic ensembles or static synapses?
Teasing out how different subfields conceptualize central terms might help move this long-standing debate forward. I asked eight scientists to weigh in.
What are mechanisms? Unpacking the term is key to progress in neuroscience
Mechanism is a common and powerful concept, invoked in grant calls and publication guidelines. But scientists use it in different ways, making it difficult to clarify standards in the field. We asked nine scientists to weigh in.