Resources
BNET Resources
- sort by:
- Relevance
- Date
- Popularity
- Exercise Your Brain’s CPU
- Concerned about how many brain cells you've killed? Don't be, you are constantly regenerating them. Around a decade ago, researchers put an end to the myth that we were born with a set number of brain cells. More recent discoveries show exercise is the best way...
- Blog posts 2008-08-18
Additional Resources
- YALE UNIVERSITY: Yale study shows way to re re-stimulate brain cell growth.
- M2 PRESSWIRE-21 October 1999-YALE UNIVERSITY: Yale study shows way to re-stimulate brain cell growth C1994-99 M2 COMMUNICATIONS LTD RDATE:211099 * Results Could Boost Understanding of Alzheimer's, Other Brain Disorders New Haven, Conn. -- Yale scientists have discovered that the...
- Research articles 1999-10-21
- -YALE UNIVERSITY: Brain cell communication mechanism visualized for first time.
- M2 PRESSWIRE-25 September 1998-YALE UNIVERSITY: Brain cell communication mechanism visualized for first time C1994-98 M2 COMMUNICATIONS LTD RDATE:230998 New Haven, Conn. -- The classic image of communication between brain cells shows a neurotransmitter crossing the synapse and binding to receptors...
- Research articles 1998-09-25
- What time is it?(University of California (Los Angeles) research on physiology of brain cells)(Brief article)
- How would we tell time if not for clocks? UCLA proposes a model in which physical changes to the brain's cells helps it to monitor the passage of time. Says Dean Buonomano, professor at the David Geffen School of Medicine, "Every time the brain processes a sensory...
- Research articles 2007-03-01
- U. may have discovered a brain cell rejuvenator
- Can medicine rejuvenate aging brain cells? A new scientific study suggests it may be possible someday. Research by a team of University of Utah and Chinese scientists shows that in rhesus monkeys' visual response dulled by age can be renewed by a drug. What may be most extraordinary...
- Research articles 2003-05-01
- The State of Stem Cell Research
- Californians are hoping that stem cell research will do for them what the invention of the car did for Michigan. At the most basic level, stem cells are primitive cells that are undifferentiated and aren't programmed to become a certain type, such as a blood or brain cell. In theory,...
- White papers 2005-02-01
- The Celebrity Cell
- To use a celebrity spokesperson or not, that is the question -- at least in the insular world of Madison Avenue. This summer, it seemed as if medical science had taken a step closer to finding a definitive answer when researchers at UCLA and CalTech found that simply flashing the...
- Research articles 2005-09-01
- Study revives debate over cancer from cell phone use
- Computerworld - A group of international scientists today released a report that again raises concerns about cell phone usage and brain tumors, noting that one recent Swedish study saw a 400% increased risk for teenage cell phone users. The 37-page report, from a group calling itself the International EMF (Electromagnetic...
- News items 2009-08-26
- Researchers seek funds to study cell phone safety
- Are cell phones safe? For years, studies have provided conflicting conclusions. Today, there is still no clear answer. But experts agree on one thing: more research is needed to find out the answer.In an effort to raise awareness among consumers and to urge government leaders to allocate more funding for...
- News items 2009-09-02
- University of California obtains United States patent.(Brief Article)
- University of California (Oakland, CA) has patented liposomes containing therapeutic genes conjugated to multiple blood-brain barrier and brain cell membrane targeting agents to provide transport of the encapsulated gene across the blood-brain barrier and brain cell membrane. Once across the blood-brain barrier and brain cell...
- Research articles 2002-04-01
- Studies Reject Cell Phone and Brain Cancer Link - American Medical Association report - Brief Article
- BETHESDA, MD. Two new studies released last month on the connection between cellular phones and brain tumors conclude that cell-phone users are no more likely than anyone else to develop benign tumors or malignant brain cancers. One study, funded by the National Cancer Institute, was released weeks prior to...
- Research articles 2001-02-01
- IBM's 'Cell University Challenge' Winners Uncover Breakthrough Applications for Brain Monitoring, Data Mapping, Medical Imaging and Object Detection
- Today at the 2007 Power Architecture Developer Conference PADC, IBM (NYSE: IBM) announced the winners of its first annual Cell Broadband EngineTM (Cell/B.E.) Processor University Challenge. From the thousands of innovative entries, winning designs featured never-before-seen uses of the Cell/B.E. technology, including large-scale modeling of the human brain; a system...
- Research articles 2007-09-24
- Is Your BlackBerry Frying Your Brain?
- If you productivity hounds didn't have enough to worry about already, here's a new factor to take into consideration: Your favorite organization tool might be harmful to your health. The Environmental Working Group has released a list ranking more than 1,000 cell phones and smartphones by the...
- Blog posts 2009-09-10
- Stem cell treatment allows paralyzed Brazilian to walk and talk again
- RIO DE JANEIRO AFP — A Brazilian woman who suffered a brain hemorrhage that left her paralyzed on one side and unable to speak has regained her ability to walk and talk after undergoing a stem cell transplant, hospital officials said. Doctors injected the stem cells into the brain...
- Research articles 2004-11-19
- BUSINESS DIARY: GENERAL MOTORS GOES GREEN WHILE BANKING LOOKS BACK
- WHAT HAPPENED TO BONEY M? IMAGINE, if you will, that you are on one of the deal teams working all hours on the merger of Bank of New York and Mellon Financial Corporation. You have expended brain cell after brain cell working out the tricky details...
- Research articles 2006-12-10
- Fellowship in brain cancer research funded at Yale.
- M2 PRESSWIRE-15 February 2005-YALE UNIVERSITY: Fellowship in brain cancer research funded at YaleC1994-2005 M2 COMMUNICATIONS LTD RDATE:02152005 New Haven, Conn. -- The Thudichum Post-Doctoral Research Fellowship in Neuro-oncology was established recently within the fields of cell biology, neurochemistry, and adult stem...
- Research articles 2005-02-15
- Breaking the brain barrier.(Science and Technology)
- The brain normally has a endothelial cell barrier that protects it from all but a few substances that are vital for its functioning, but this also makes it difficult to introduce needed drugs into the brain. A research procedure that attaches drugs to natural brain-entering molecules is discussed.IF THE body...
- Research articles 1997-01-04
- US DEPT OF HHS: Transplanted neural stem cells migrate through abnormal brain, reduce symptoms.
- M2 PRESSWIRE-8 June 1999-US DEPT OF HHS: Transplanted neural stem cells migrate throughout the abnormal brain, reduce disease symptoms C1994-99 M2 COMMUNICATIONS LTD RDATE:070699 For years, researchers have probed the mysteries of neural stem cells - immature cells that can differentiate...
- Research articles 1999-06-08
- Cell Therapeutics, Inc. plans to submit marketing applications for potential approval of XYOTAX and NeoPharm gets FDA approval to conduct data analysis during brain tumor treatment trial.
- M2 PRESSWIRE-25 August 2005-US Financial Network: Cell Therapeutics, Inc. plans to submit marketing applications for potential approval of XYOTAX and NeoPharm gets FDA approval to conduct data analysis during brain tumor treatment trialC1994-2005 M2 COMMUNICATIONS LTD RDATE:25082005 City of Industry,...
- Research articles 2005-08-25
- Penn Researchers Reveal Inner Workings of Transcription Factor Protein in Neuronal Cell Dendrites; Cell-Death Protein Could Play a Role in Neurodegeneration and Schizophrenia.
- Byline: University of Pennsylvania Health System PHILADELPHIA, June 6 AScribe Newswire -- Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine discovered that a protein called Elk-1 interacts with mitochondria, the energy storehouse of a cell, suggesting that this protein - typically active in...
- Research articles 2006-06-06
- << Previous
- page 1 of 1
- Next >>



