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lentoutcry

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Brain motion is driven by mechanical coupling with the abdomen

nature.com
4 points·by lentoutcry·2 months ago·0 comments

Breathing pattern is as unique as a fingerprint

psypost.org
3 points·by lentoutcry·3 months ago·0 comments

Why I don't think 'Neuralink' will ever be profitable

theneuroscienceofeverydaylife.substack.com
1 points·by lentoutcry·3 months ago·0 comments

Health benefits of Paris climate goals could save lives by 2040

carbonbrief.org
7 points·by lentoutcry·3 months ago·0 comments

Polygraphs have major flaws. Are there better options?

undark.org
2 points·by lentoutcry·3 months ago·0 comments

Para-Academic Techno-Philosophy

elftheory.substack.com
4 points·by lentoutcry·4 months ago·0 comments

Should you do a PhD? (2025)

neurofrontiers.blog
2 points·by lentoutcry·4 months ago·0 comments

Audio tapes reveal mass rule-breaking in Milgram's obedience experiments

psypost.org
227 points·by lentoutcry·4 months ago·133 comments

'Friction-maxxing' in school: Students should read primary lit, not AI summaries

thetransmitter.org
6 points·by lentoutcry·4 months ago·0 comments

[untitled]

1 points·by lentoutcry·4 months ago·0 comments

Is lighter sleep a normal part of ageing – or a sign of something more serious?

theconversation.com
3 points·by lentoutcry·4 months ago·0 comments

Never mind Band-Aids, Neanderthals had antiseptic birch tar

arstechnica.com
6 points·by lentoutcry·4 months ago·0 comments

From chickens to humans, animals think "bouba" sounds round

arstechnica.com
4 points·by lentoutcry·5 months ago·0 comments

Echoes of Memory

neurofrontiers.blog
3 points·by lentoutcry·9 months ago·0 comments

Rats walk again after breakthrough spinal cord repair with 3D printing

sciencedaily.com
7 points·by lentoutcry·10 months ago·0 comments

DBS reshapes emotional networks in treatment-resistant depression

psypost.org
1 points·by lentoutcry·10 months ago·0 comments

Scientists Turned Our Cells into Quantum Computers–Sort Of

popularmechanics.com
6 points·by lentoutcry·10 months ago·0 comments

How often do health insurers say no to patients? (2023)

propublica.org
94 points·by lentoutcry·10 months ago·99 comments

Neurons Feed Tumors

nature.com
2 points·by lentoutcry·10 months ago·0 comments

Progesterone in the Brain

neurofrontiers.blog
2 points·by lentoutcry·10 months ago·0 comments

comments

lentoutcry
·4 months ago·discuss
[flagged]
lentoutcry
·11 months ago·discuss
I found this very wholesome, it’s sound advice that everyone kind of knows (work out, eat well, sleep etc) but a nice reminder to get up from my desk and take a walk sometimes.
lentoutcry
·12 months ago·discuss
I get unemployment being high for office-based jobs right now, companies think they can slap AI onto everything and get rid of employees, but what’s the reason for min wage jobs? Are they suddenly overflowing with applicants?
lentoutcry
·last year·discuss
this is so disturbing. beyond not installing one of these in the first place, is there anything we can do to stop companies from going down the dystopian route?
lentoutcry
·last year·discuss
on the bright side, they’re contributing to the economy by creating more jobs /s (although I pity whoever ends up dealing with that mess)
lentoutcry
·last year·discuss
what about methylene blue? I saw an article around the other day saying basically that it’s mostly hype, but I’ve also heard good things about it.
lentoutcry
·last year·discuss
this is the first time I’m hearing taurine had been linked in any way to aging (while also finding out that’s no longer supported by evidence). all I knew was that it’s something energy drinks have. but I’m curious, did this take off as a popular supplement?
lentoutcry
·last year·discuss
researchers don’t receive unlimited funding for life, even if they made it into a permanent position. they have to regularly apply for grants, and those applications are reviewed by experts and have to be grounded properly in previous work. it’s just that potential for profit is not a criterion for evaluation, as it is in the private sector
lentoutcry
·last year·discuss
a lot of basic research is very risky and most of the time it’s not stuff that leads to immediate development of a new drug. it’s basically acquiring knowledge with the hope that some of it might turn out to be practically useful in the future, but in the short term, it just allows us to understand stuff. but it’s not directly profitable, so private companies aren’t motivated to invest so much money in that
lentoutcry
·last year·discuss
yep. I don't wanna be in the shoes of the doctors who'll have to deal with this. although I suspect a part of them will resign, leading to even more "fun" downstream effects
lentoutcry
·last year·discuss
it's so surreal to me how this is happening under our eyes and nobody's stopping it. the impact this will have on our health is so staggering. and what's worse, even if these cuts were reversed tomorrow, it would still take quite some time to reverse the negative effects
lentoutcry
·last year·discuss
to be completely fair, journals of negative results have popped up in some fields, but I've never really heard anyone mentioning any paper published in such a journal
lentoutcry
·last year·discuss
same. there's something about it that I can't put my finger on, but that makes it so lifeless and gives me the impression I'm looking at the same boring image over and over and over again