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Photo: Prashant Gupta/FX Travis Kelce has been bit by the acting bug. The Kansas City Chiefs tight end made his (non–Saturday Night Live, non-commercial, non-NFL) TV debut on Ryan Murphy’s Grotesquerie last night, playing a swaggy orderly who may or may not be a figment of Niecy Nash-Betts’s imagination. Fun! The question, of course, is:...
In the late 1960s, researchers at the Weizmann Institute of Science, including Professors Michael Sela and Ruth Arnon and Dr. Dvora Teitelbaum, developed synthetic molecules called copolymers. Initially intended to mimic multiple sclerosis (MS) in animal models, these compounds unexpectedly led to a breakthrough drug, Copaxone, used worldwide to treat...
A recent study published in Neuropsychologia has identified specific patterns of brain connectivity that can predict an individual’s tendency toward online shopping addiction. Using advanced brain imaging and predictive modeling techniques, researchers found that certain connections between key brain networks, such as the frontal-parietal network and default mode network, played...
A new study published in the Journal of Vision has unveiled how our brains detect faces even when presented with limited and ambiguous visual information. Using a specialized technique to suppress conscious awareness, the researchers found that stimuli resembling faces are processed more quickly, even when visual details are minimal....