Robots and self-driving cars could soon benefit from a new kind of brain-inspired hardware that can allegedly detect movement ...
The human eye contains a blind spot at the back of the eye where the optic nerve and retinal blood enter and exit, but our ...
Speed training your brain could help delay developing dementia by years, according to a recent National Institutes of Health ...
New neuromorphic motion-detection hardware slashes processing delays in robots and autonomous vehicles, promising faster ...
A simple brain-training program that sharpens how quickly older adults process visual information may have a surprisingly powerful long-term payoff. In a major 20-year study of adults 65 and older, ...
Previous studies have reported that the cerebellum, which is most well-known for coordinating the body’s movements, is also ...
Professor Zhen Zhang's research group at the State Key Laboratory of Bionic Interface Materials Science, University of ...
Researchers tracked more than 2,800 older adults for 20 years to assess whether brain-training exercises could lower the risk ...
Professor Zhen Zhang's research group at the State Key Laboratory of Bionic Interface Materials Science, University of Science and Technology of China, proposed and constructed a neuromorphic ...
A long U.S. study finds simple computer based brain training may lower dementia risk even decades later in older adults.
A University of Jyväskylä dissertation shows that a background in visual arts shapes how the brain processes color.
Computer-based cognitive training that mimics quickly completing tasks with divided attention tied to a reduced likelihood of ...