Ví dụ về việc sử dụng Neuroscientist trong Tiếng anh và bản dịch của chúng sang Tiếng việt
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A neuroscientist explains why you should stop listening to music while you work.
Collins and another Loyola professor, neuroscientist Edward Neafsey, Ph.D., suggest a second possible explanation.
Neuroscientist Antonio Damasio studied people with damage on the part of the brain where emotions are generated.
Consciousness begins when brain gains the power, the simple power I might add,of telling a story," explained neuroscientist Antonio Damasio.
But neuroscientist and sleep expert Matthew Walker says that's wrong.
This arrangement may allow mantis shrimp to storequite high-level visual information,” said neuroscientist Nicholas Strausfeld from the University of Arizona.
The neuroscientist Antonio Damasio conducted studies on people with damage to the part of the brain that triggers emotions.
Sylvie Tremblay holds a Master of Science in molecular and cellular biology andhas years of experience as a cancer researcher and neuroscientist.
Marco Iacoboni- neuroscientist at the University of California said that“mirror neurons showed us how others pretend play.
In one experiment, the University of Tübingen neurobiologist Jan Born andUllrich Wagner, a neuroscientist at the University of Münster, taught a group of people a relatively complex math task.
Tsukumo Ryusuke is neuroscientist working for the National Research Institute of Police Science(part of the National Police Agency).
Disorder of circadian rhythm could lead to many human diseases, including sleep disorders, diabetic mellitus, cancer,and neurodegenerative diseases,” says neuroscientist Hung-Chun Chang.
The experimental psychologist and cognitive neuroscientist Endel Tulving refers to memory as“mental time travel”, a process unique to humans.
Neuroscientist proved that synapses the million billion connections in your brain that make you remember and understand, grow mainly at night when you are asleep.
By comparing your index and ring fingers, a neuroscientist can tell if you are likely to be anxious, or if you are likely to be a good athlete.
And just like we don't care so much about which phone we buy in terms of the hardware-- we buy it forthe operating system-- as a neuroscientist, I always dreamt of building the iOS of the mind, if you will.
In a recent study, neuroscientist David Creswell explored what happens in the brain when people tackle problems that are too big for their conscious mind to solve.
The clown- with its painted-on expression of happiness and humor-limits the range of feelings we're supposed to feel," neuroscientist Jordan Gaines Lewis wrote in a blog post for Psychology Today.
According to Vittorio Gallese- neuroscientist at the University of Parma(Italy) said that, when exposed themselves to others, especially the brain and“mirror neurons” did more than we thought.
Nirenberg Neuroscience LLC: Ford announced an exclusive licensing agreement with Nirenberg Neuroscience,a machine vision company founded by neuroscientist Dr. Sheila Nirenberg, who cracked the neural code the eye uses to transmit visual information to the brain.
According to a study by Steven Miller, a neuroscientist at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences in Bethesda, Md., the best time to consume caffeine is between 9:30 AM to 11:30 AM.
For a long-term study published in the journal Emotion in 2012,University of Wisconsin neuroscientist Richard Davidson looked into the idea that meditation might help us cope with outside disturbances.
As a neuroscientist, I am currently part of a team of experts organised by the European Space Agency to work out whether and how we might be able to put humans into a state of stasis?
One of the clinical trials is sponsored by a company that neuroscientist Tony Wyss-Coray, at Stanford University in California, is involved with- he's the chair of their scientific advisory board.
Douglas Fields, neuroscientist and author of the book Why We Snap, says our brains have evolved to monitor for danger and spark aggression in response to any perceived danger as a defense mechanism.
Eric Kandel, a Nobel prize-winning neuroscientist, writes“only when we pay close attention to a new piece of information are we able to associate it meaningfully and systematically with knowledge already well established in memory”.
In 2004, Neuroscientist Dr. Richard Davidson's would study the EEG waves emitted by Tibetan meditating monks and found some of the monks produced Gamma wave activity more powerful and of higher amplitude than any documented case in history.
In 2009 neuroscientist Sharon Thompson-Schill of the University of Pennsylvania and her colleagues proposed that creative inspiration might benefit from a state of lower cognitive control- that is, fewer restrictions on your thoughts and behavior.
In a study last year, neuroscientist Michael Kiebler from Ludwig-Maximilian University of Munich showed that Stau2 is the protein that helps direct mRNA toward the neuronal synapses- the point of communication between a neuron and another neuron or target cell.