As we get older, our perception of exercise changes. We can work with the changes in our brains to start enjoying it.
Left-Lateral-Ventricle Left-Inf-Lat-Vent Left-Cerebellum-White-Matter Left-Cerebellum-Cortex Left-Thalamus-Proper Left-Caudate Left-Putamen Left-Pallidum 3rd-Ventricle 4th-Ventricle Brain-Stem ...
This process is known as higher-order conditioning and can be measured using sensory preconditioning tasks in rodents. This behavioral paradigm requires the repeated and simultaneous presentation of ...
Dec. 12, 2024 — The prevalence of armed conflicts, terrorist attacks and industrial accidents necessitates clinician understanding of blast injuries in both civilian and military settings. Blast ...
According to Emerson Human Capitol, our brains are hard-wired to resist change, as the amygdala interprets change as a threat and releases the hormones for fear, fight, or flight. As a result ...
However, vCA1, not dCA1, received innervations from the subregions of olfactory areas and amygdala nuclei. Characterization of the direct input networks of dCA1 and vCA1 PNs may provide a structural ...
Mar. 17, 2025 — Early-life adversity affects more than half of the world's children and is a significant risk factor for cognitive and mental health problems later in life. In an extensive and ...
Cerebellum, hippocampus, amygdala, and ventricles, were retained as per the original M-CRIB atlas, and parcellation protocols for these regions are listed in Loh et al. (2016) and Alexander et al.