In a development that sounds fit for a horror film, scientists at Stanford University have transplanted human brain cells into rats. These human-rat brain hybrids could be used to study conditions ...
In Dr. Sergiu Pașca's research lab at Stanford University, the resident rats have clumps of human cells in their brains. Blow on a rat's whiskers and the human cells on the opposite side of its brain ...
In a breakthrough study providing evidence that it’s indeed possible for neurons of one species to form and function within the brain of another, Stanford University scientists have successfully ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. This microscope image provided by Pasca Lab/Stanford Medicine shows a human astrocyte cell, center in yellow, and human glial ...
STANFORD, Calif. -- For decades researchers have been peering into the human brain, trying to unlock the secrets of conditions ranging from autism to epilepsy to mental illness. But now, instead of ...
Seven years ago, researchers at Stanford University started an ambitious experiment: They began growing miniature, simplified versions of the human brain from stem cells inside a lab, then later ...
This story is free to read because readers choose to support LAist. If you find value in independent local reporting, make a donation to power our newsroom today. Scientists have demonstrated a new ...
To coax human nerve cells in a laboratory to thrive, there are three magic words: location, location, location. Many experiments grow human nerve cells in lab dishes. But a new study enlists some real ...