Children who experience traumatic events may show subtle but measurable differences in how their brains process attention and control impulses, according to a new study published in Neuropsychologia.
A woman who has suffered two traumatic brain injuries is set to take on an endurance challenge to show "recovery is possible" ...
In A Nutshell College football players take hundreds of head hits each season, even without diagnosed concussions. In a small ...
Adolescents have long engaged in high-risk behaviors and poor decisions. Now we know that it's got a lot to do with what's ...
New research from the University of Virginia School of Medicine is revealing why traumatic brain injury increases the chance of developing Alzheimer’s disease – and the discovery is pointing to a ...
Stressed brain cells can survive longer by slowing sugar use, revealing a short-term protective response that later turns ...
A four–amino acid peptide called CAQK has shown powerful brain-protective effects in animal models of traumatic brain injury. Delivered through a standard IV, it zeroes in on injured brain tissue, ...
University of Virginia School of Medicine researchers have uncovered how and why traumatic brain injury (TBI) increases the risk for Alzheimer's disease, and their work suggests a potential way to ...
For much of the 20th century, scientists believed that the adult human brain was largely fixed. According to this view, the ...
Learn the new science of brain development and discover the importance of connections and learning for ongoing brain health.