The Synchronicity of Memory - NIH Director's Blog - 1 views
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You see those same four neurons, their activity logged individually. Cooler colors—indigo to turquoise—indicate background or low neuronal activity; warmer colors—yellow to red—indicate high neuronal activity.
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neuronal burst synchronization and hippocampus-dependent memory formation
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broad implications, from improving memory to reconditioning the mental associations that underlie post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
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"You may think that you're looking at a telescopic heat-map of a distant planet, with clickable thumbnail images to the right featuring its unique topography. In fact, what you're looking at is a small region of the brain that's measured in micrometers and stands out as a fascinating frontier of discovery into the very origins of thought and cognition."
Predicting 'Long COVID Syndrome' with Help of a Smartphone App - NIH Director's Blog - 0 views
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Recommended by Tyler Orion, Endorsed by DeAunne Denmark, MD, PhD :This is an example of the high quality and thoughtful study design needed to accurately and meaningfully interpret real-world tracking data. This prediction signal would not have been detected in the larger (inconsistently reporting) group, or in those who hadn't tracked enough before getting sick. Which relates to the importance of creating a baseline health timeline and consistently collecting robust, standardized pre-intervention contextual data. And another illustration re: why I keep circling back to these in all of our n-of-1 discussions :)
David Treleaven | Trauma-Sensitive Mindfulness - 0 views
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Recommended by Jessica Block "My name is David Treleaven. I'm a writer, educator, and trauma professional who teaches people to offer mindfulness in a trauma-sensitive way. Unbeknownst to many, mindfulness meditation can exacerbate symptoms of traumatic stress. Instructed to pay close, sustained attention to their inner-world, people struggling with trauma can experience flashbacks, dysregulation, or dissociation. On this site, you'll find resources designed to prevent this while leveraging the power of mindfulness towards trauma recovery."
Webinar: The Science of Sleep Apnea - 0 views
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March 11, 2021 6:00 PM MST Clinical Pearls + Innovative Treatment Dentist Dr. Tammarie Heit and Cardiologist Dr. Mimi Guarneri will explore sleep apnea from their respective fields. Areas of discussion include: sleep-disordered breathing and implications. A clinical diagnosis of sleep-disordered breathing in adults with clinical pearls. Innovative treatment options available from trained dentists and how they work. This hour-long discussion will allow for your questions through this interactive live broadcast. We hope you can join us!
What Do Vaccine Efficacy Numbers Actually Mean? - The New York Times - 0 views
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"Efficacy is a crucial concept in vaccine trials, but it's also a tricky one. If a vaccine has an efficacy of, say, 95 percent, that doesn't mean that 5 percent of people who receive that vaccine will get Covid-19. And just because one vaccine ends up with a higher efficacy estimate than another in trials doesn't necessarily mean it's superior. Here's why."
Sewage-handling robots help predict COVID-19 outbreaks in San Diego | EurekAlert! Scien... - 0 views
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"From July to November 2020, Karthikeyan and team, led by Rob Knight, PhD, professor and director of the Center for Microbiome Innovation at UC San Diego, sampled sewage water to see if they could detect SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. They could. But concentrating the wastewater proved to be a bottleneck -- it's a slow and laborious multi-step process."
Understanding Medical Research: Your Facebook Friend is Wrong | Coursera - 0 views
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Recommended by Trish Makowiak: How can you tell if the bold headlines seen on social media are truly touting the next big thing or if the article isn't worth the paper it's printed on? Understanding Medical Studies, will provide you with the tools and skills you need to critically interpret medical studies, and determine for yourself the difference between good and bad science. The course covers study-design, research methods, and statistical interpretation. It also delves into the dark side of medical research by covering fraud, biases, and common misinterpretations of data. Each lesson will highlight case-studies from real-world journal articles. By the end of this course, you'll have the tools you need to determine the trustworthiness of the scientific information you're reading and, of course, whether or not your Facebook friend is wrong. This course was made possible in part by the George M. O'Brien Kidney Center at Yale.
The Spread of Misinformation - 0 views
Single Page Courses - Uncanny Owl - 0 views
Hands-On Data Journalism: Techniques of Analysis and Visualization - Journalism Courses... - 0 views
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"Through hands-on tutorials over the next four weeks, we want to make you a better data journalist who can use a few free tools and specific techniques to make it easier to mine datasets in search of answers and stories. We will use an example database (about dogs !) along with a dataset of your own choosing."
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May 31st to June 27 - $95
Real-World Evidence | FDA - 0 views
Lirio | The Leader In Behavior Change AI - 1 views
Juno's Personal Data Exploratory - 1 views
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