Tag:

Neuroscience

Parakeets Talking May Unlock Breakthroughs In Speech Disorder, Stroke Therapies: Study Parakeets Talking May Unlock Breakthroughs In Speech Disorder, Stroke Therapies: Study
Parakeets Talking May Unlock Breakthroughs In Speech Disorder, Stroke Therapies: Study Parakeet brains and their ability to mimic human talking could help people suffering from speech disorders, according to a new study. For the first time, scientists at New York University's Grossman School of Medicine recorded brain activity in parakeets as the birds made sounds. The researchers' findings were published in the scientific journal Nature on Wednesday, Mar. 19. The NYU study found that parakeet brains generate patterns previously observed only in humans while speaking. The findings may help guide future treatments for speech disorders like apraxia, which affects spee…
Beloved Sparta High School Grad, Johns Hopkins Research Technologist Dies Suddenly, 26 Beloved Sparta High School Grad, Johns Hopkins Research Technologist Dies Suddenly, 26
Beloved Sparta High School Grad, Johns Hopkins Research Technologist Dies Suddenly, 26 Beloved Sparta High School graduate and Johns Hopkins research technologist Erin Julia Beebe died unexpectedly on Monday, April 4. She was 26. Erin attended Reverend George A. Brown Memorial School and Pope John XXIII High School before graduating from Sparta High School in 2014, her obituary says. She then used her love of science to pursue higher education at Muhlenberg College, where she graduated with a Neuroscience degree in 2018. Erin went on to earn employment as a Laboratory Research Assistant in the Department of Neurology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine at the…
Garfield Baby Missing Chunk Of Skull Is First Ever To Survive Garfield Baby Missing Chunk Of Skull Is First Ever To Survive
Garfield Baby Missing Chunk Of Skull Is First Ever To Survive A Garfield baby born missing part of his skull was given one day to live. Well, it's been seven months -- making him the first in the world with the rare condition to survive, according to several recent reports including this one in the New York Post. Maria Santa Maria, 30, originally of Clifton, discovered her son's condition in the first trimester of her pregnancy.  Doctors suggested the mom and her husband, Augusto Santa Maria, 31, abort the baby. The couple decided to go through with the pregnancy and explained to their three daughters that Lucas' first day on earth would likely be …