Morning Overview on MSN
Scientists finally map how smell is organized in mice — receptors follow neat patterns nobody predicted
For decades, neuroscience textbooks described the inside of a mouse’s nose as a loosely organized patchwork: olfactory ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Smell receptors in the nose form organized patterns, not the random arrangement scientists assumed
The inside of a mouse’s nose looks chaotic under a standard microscope: millions of sensory neurons packed into a thin, mucus ...
When any computer user types on a keyboard, the pattern of keystrokes and pauses is unique - like a fingerprint. When using a mouse, or touchscreen, the patterns for each user are just as different - ...
Engineers are working to protect computer networks and data by using unique keyboard, computer mouse and mobile device "fingerprints." We've all typed in a password to access a computer network. But ...
Our brains can distinguish highly similar patterns, thanks to a process called pattern separation. How exactly our brains separate patterns is, however, not full,y understood yet. Using a full-scale ...
Allen Institute researchers (left to right) Greggory Heller, Tamina Ramirez, Corbett Bennett, Séverine Durand and Joshua Siegle) are using Neuropixels probes to reveal how visual information flows ...
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