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19137 results for "imagination research"

Scientists Discover How Imagination Actually Works in Brain
Health & WellnessMay 1

Scientists Discover How Imagination Actually Works in Brain

Researchers have uncovered a surprising truth about imagination: your brain creates mental images by quieting neurons, not firing them up. This breakthrough flips decades of neuroscience on its head.

Singularity Hub2 min read
Scientists Prove Apes Can Imagine and Play Pretend
InnovationFeb 6

Scientists Prove Apes Can Imagine and Play Pretend

A 43-year-old bonobo named Kanzi played an imaginary tea party with researchers, pointing to cups of pretend juice and bowls of invisible grapes. The groundbreaking study proves that imagination isn't uniquely human after all.

Euronews3 min read
Scientists Launch Independent Autism Research Group
SolutionsMar 20

Scientists Launch Independent Autism Research Group

Leading autism researchers and advocates formed a new independent committee to guide autism research priorities and counter recent federal changes. The group aims to unite the autism community and protect evidence-based research as funding reaches $568 million annually.

STAT News3 min read
Scientists Launch Tool to Fix Research's Trust Problem
SolutionsMar 17

Scientists Launch Tool to Fix Research's Trust Problem

A scientist who revolutionized protein research is now tackling science's reproducibility crisis with AI. His new approach could help researchers separate reliable studies from questionable ones, speeding up cures for diseases like Alzheimer's.

STAT News2 min read
New AI Cuts Research Time for Scientists Worldwide
InnovationApr 14

New AI Cuts Research Time for Scientists Worldwide

Scientists now have access to an AI tool that filters through 150 years of research data to deliver trustworthy answers in seconds. CAS Newton helps researchers move from question to verified answer without drowning in information overload.

Google: scientific discovery2 min read
Brain Uses Same Neurons for Seeing and Imagining
InnovationApr 14

Brain Uses Same Neurons for Seeing and Imagining

Scientists discovered that when you picture something in your mind's eye, your brain activates the exact same neurons used for actually seeing it. This breakthrough could help researchers restore sight to people with vision loss.

NPR Science2 min read
Bonobo Kanzi Proves Apes Can Use Their Imagination Too
VideosFeb 6

Bonobo Kanzi Proves Apes Can Use Their Imagination Too

A 43-year-old bonobo named Kanzi just aced pretend tea party tests at Johns Hopkins University, choosing imaginary juice over empty cups 68% of the time. Scientists say this groundbreaking discovery shows apes can imagine things that aren't there, just like human toddlers do.

Ars Technica Science3 min read
South Africa Rescues Medical Research With $32M Fund
SolutionsApr 16

South Africa Rescues Medical Research With $32M Fund

When US funding cuts threatened to collapse decades of life-saving health research in South Africa, the country fought back with a $32 million rescue package. Now 59 critical HIV and tuberculosis research projects are moving forward.

AllAfrica - Health3 min read
South Korea Launches K-Science to Build Research Icons
InnovationMar 13

South Korea Launches K-Science to Build Research Icons

South Korea is creating a new research movement to produce globally recognized scientists like Jane Goodall by focusing on uniquely Korean topics. The K-Science initiative aims to blend the nation's culture, history, and environment with cutting-edge research.

Regional: south korea technology (KR)2 min read
Apes Can Imagine: Bonobo Aces Pretend Tea Party Tests
Planet WinsFeb 6

Apes Can Imagine: Bonobo Aces Pretend Tea Party Tests

Scientists discovered that apes can use their imagination and play pretend, a mental ability long thought uniquely human. A 43-year-old bonobo named Kanzi correctly tracked imaginary juice and grapes during tea party experiments, proving apes have rich mental lives beyond the present moment.

Google News - Science3 min read
Knoxville Research Director Wins First Campus-Wide Honor
InnovationFeb 26

Knoxville Research Director Wins First Campus-Wide Honor

Jennifer Ferris transformed a "Wild Wild West" research environment into a thriving 17-person operation, earning the first university-wide staff award ever given to UT Health Sciences' Knoxville campus. Her journey from solo clinical trial coordinator to award-winning director shows how one person's vision can reshape an entire research community.

Google News - Clinical Trial Success3 min read
Bonobo Named Kanzi Could Imagine, Scientists Discover
VideosMar 18

Bonobo Named Kanzi Could Imagine, Scientists Discover

A bonobo who could use symbols to communicate just proved that imagination isn't uniquely human. Kanzi tracked pretend juice and grapes in experiments, showing that great apes may have been imagining things for millions of years.

Mongabay3 min read
Nigeria's 400,000-Sample Biobank Transforms Disease Research
InnovationApr 2

Nigeria's 400,000-Sample Biobank Transforms Disease Research

Nigeria's medical research institute has unveiled a biobank containing over 400,000 biological samples that could revolutionize how the country understands and treats diseases. The massive collection offers locally generated data that researchers say will lead to better health outcomes for millions of Africans.

Vanguard Nigeria3 min read
Scientists Build Grassroots Research Network After NIH Cuts
InnovationMay 28

Scientists Build Grassroots Research Network After NIH Cuts

After federal research funding collapsed and thousands of scientists lost their jobs, a new model of community-driven science is taking root across America. From state-funded research bonds to mobile MRI scanners in rural towns, researchers are discovering that science doesn't need ivory towers to thrive.

STAT News3 min read
Marco Island Gala Raises Cancer Research Funds in Style
Acts of KindnessFeb 12

Marco Island Gala Raises Cancer Research Funds in Style

Cancer survivors rang bells and shared stories as Marco Island's Imagination Ball combined timeless elegance with lifesaving purpose. The American Cancer Society fundraiser brought the community together to support research that could one day end cancer diagnoses.

Google News - Cancer Survivor2 min read
Scientists Launch Trust Seal for Research Integrity
SolutionsMay 27

Scientists Launch Trust Seal for Research Integrity

A coalition of major scientific organizations just unveiled a new "Trust Seal" to help readers spot reliable research in an age of AI-driven information. The community-led initiative aims to rebuild confidence in science by recognizing publications that follow the highest standards.

Google: scientific discovery3 min read
MIT.nano's New System Powers 160,000 Research Hours
InnovationMay 5

MIT.nano's New System Powers 160,000 Research Hours

Over 1,500 researchers at MIT.nano now access 200+ advanced research tools through a streamlined system that makes cutting-edge science easier than ever. The new platform turns what used to be a scheduling headache into a seamless experience that keeps innovation moving.

MIT News2 min read
Scientists Finally Recognizing Librarians as Research Experts
Acts of KindnessApr 14

Scientists Finally Recognizing Librarians as Research Experts

Librarians are breaking free from the "service provider" stereotype to become valued research partners and co-authors on scientific studies. One librarian's expertise in consumer health and digital literacy earned them spots on multiple research teams.

Nature News2 min read
AI Partner Speeds Up Research on Aging, Disease, and More
InnovationMay 20

AI Partner Speeds Up Research on Aging, Disease, and More

Scientists at Stanford, MIT, and Cambridge are using Google DeepMind's Co-Scientist AI to accelerate breakthroughs in liver disease, aging, and infectious diseases. The system helps researchers digest decades of studies in days, spotting connections humans might miss.

Google: scientific discovery3 min read
Singapore Teen Publishes Cancer Research at 16
Community HeroesMar 18

Singapore Teen Publishes Cancer Research at 16

A high school junior just became a published medical researcher, analyzing surgical techniques that could help liver cancer patients live longer. His work passed the same peer review process as professional scientists.

Google News - Education Milestone2 min read

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