A Dartmouth study challenges the conventional view that the amygdala—the two-sided structure deep in the brain involved in ...
Waiting between rewards may help the brain learn faster. New research shows timing, not repetition, drives stronger learning updates.
Post-pandemic, many organizations have turned to some form of a hybrid approach: employees splitting their time between remote work and commuting into the office. Instead of everyone interacting ...
How we learn to predict an outcome isn’t determined by how many times a cue and reward happen together. Instead, how much ...
No body, no dopamine, no problem. Scientists have successfully coached lab-grown brain tissue to solve a classic robotics challenge, proving that the will to learn is hardwired into our neurons.
When babies are born, their brains contain billions of neurons. But how those neurons interact — and what they can do as babies grow through childhood into adulthood — is largely shaped by their ...