Morning Overview on MSN
Scientists may have a way to reverse age-related memory
Recent breakthroughs in neuroscience have brought us closer to understanding the mechanisms of memory loss in aging brains, ...
As far as we know, this is the smallest neural implant that will measure electrical activity in the brain and then report it ...
Modern Engineering Marvels on MSN
For the First Time Ever, a Time Crystal Links to the Outside World
For the first time, researchers have successfully coupled a continuous time crystal-a quantum system that oscillates ...
If you have a brain, and if you know others who do, then you know there’s a catastrophic catalogue of ways that our skull-socket electro-fat computers can disappoint their owners. From memory-loss to ...
The Brighterside of News on MSN
Scientists built a microscopic ‘ocean’ on a silicon chip to study quantum waves
For more than 50 years, scientists have dreamed of seeing the hidden patterns that govern the motion of nonlinear waves—the unpredictable ripples that shape tsunamis, tides, and turbulent flows. Now, ...
Experimental synth specialist Soma Laboratory has announced Warp, a new desktop multi-effect unit designed for both studio ...
Behringer has announced the release of SD-3, a clone of the classic Simmons analogue drum synth of the same name, launched all the way back in 1978.
Researchers analyzing pulsar data have found tantalizing hints of ultra-slow gravitational waves. A team from Hirosaki University suggests these signals might carry “beats” — patterns formed by ...
Roughly the width of a human hair, the implant works by encoding neural signals into pulses of infrared light, which then travel through brain tissue and bone to a receiver.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results
Feedback