neuroscientist造句1. Nowhere inside our brains or eyes has any neuroscientist ever found anything remotely resembling our constant everyday experience of light.
2. But only in the past several years have neuroscientists made much progress in illuminating how caffeine revs up the brain.
3. Californian neuroscientist John Lilly may have done most to bring Ketamine to our attention.
4. That's pretty much what Dartmouth neuroscientist William Kelley did.
5. Cognitive neuroscientist Al Seckel explores how eye tricks can reveal the way the brain processes visual information -- or fails to do so.
6. A leading neuroscientist says processing digital information can rewire your circuits. But is it evolution?
7. Neuroscientist Avshalom Caspi , then at Kings College London, led the two thousand three study.
8. Peter Bergold, a neuroscientist who teaches at SUNY Downstate in Brooklyn, was also inspired by the past.
9. The study is "groundbreaking," says neuroscientist Riitta Hari of the Aalto University School of Science and Technology in Espoo, Finland.
10. "It's very provocative, " says Lisa Monteggia, a neuroscientist at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, in Dallas. "It goes back to two schools of thought: Lamarck versus Darwin."
11. Gladwell discusses the famous cases of cognitive neuroscientist Antonio Damasio where damage to the ventromedial prefrontal cortex caused nonfunctional behavior without impairing intelligence.
12. For decades, admittedly, no neuroscientist has been known to repeat the love experiment.
13. A cognitive neuroscientist who until 2005 was at the California Institute of Technology, he is the author of many books and articles and has compiled several eye tricks calendars.
14. Donald Kennedy, a neuroscientist who is also editor of Science, says it is likely that "some extension of the domain of exculpatory conditions" will be made as a result of neuroscientific advances.
15. In 2002, Daphne Bavelier, a cognitive neuroscientist at the University of Rochester in New York state, found that playing action video games improved visual attention skills.
16. Another coauthor was Kai Miller, a neuroscientist at the University of Washington in Seattle.
17. Serotonin is just one of the neurotransmitters under investigation as neuroscientists continue to explore how alcohol works in the brain.
18. Chimpanzees are such an unsuccessful species that they are considerably outnumbered by neuroscientists.
19. This engram resides in a tiny area in the brain's cerebellum - a place many neuroscientists never thought to look.
20. In fact, a team of scientists that includes Roger Pitman, a psychiatrist at Harvard, and Karim Nader, a neuroscientist at McGill, is already much farther along in the effort to reshape human memories.
21. "The story they're telling makes sense to me, " says cognitive neuroscientist Karen Emmorey of San Diego State University, who also studies how the brain processes sign language.
22. The project, which began three years ago, grew out of a lecture neuroscientist Beau Lotto of University College London gave at the school, where his son Misha was a student.
23. Still curious about the nature of self-deception, denial and neglect, I called V.S. Ramachandran, a legendary neuroscientist at the University of California – San Diego and an expert on anosognosia.
24. The findings challenge the traditional textbook view that the main job of the hippocampus is to encode new memories, says Lynn Nadel, a cognitive neuroscientist at the University of Arizona in Tucson.
25. They based their work on research developed in the laboratory of neuroscientist John Donoghue.
26. This was the claim made by Rebecca Saxe, a cognitive neuroscientist from MIT and now leader of the Saxelab.
27. 'Our finding suggests that the adult human brain is far more plastic than previously believed, ' researcher Li-Hai Tan, a cognitive neuroscientist at the University of Hong Kong, told LiveScience.
28. 'You're elaborating on why they were meaningful, and you're laying down an additional memory trace, ' says neuroscientist James McGaugh at UC Irvine.
29. "Estrogen is able to protect neurons against toxic assaults that are associated with Alzheimer's disease, " notes Roberta Diaz Brinton, a neuroscientist at the University of Southern California.
30. This tail-wagging bias was documented in a 2007 article in the journal Current Biology by Italian neuroscientist Giorgio Vallortigara and his veterinarian colleagues at the University of Bari.