Boston University's BU Today recently profiled affiliated Martinos researchers Marlene Oscar Berman, Susan Mosher Ruiz and Kayle Sawyer and work they are doing to examining the long-term effects of alcoholism on the brain.
Martinos Center News
The Washington Post wants to know: Why don't we have more effective treatments for nausea? In a recent article, Kendall Powell checked in with Martinos Center researcher Vitaly Napadow and others to see how they were addressing this question.
Patients with the most common form of focal epilepsy exhibit widespread, abnormal connections in their brains, according to a Radiology study published today by Steven Stufflebeam and colleagues.
Dara Manoach and Co-PI Susan Whitfield-Gabrieli have received seed grant funding from the Simons Center for the Social Brain at MIT.
A recent study by Marco Loggia and colleagues has been covered by NBC, FOX, US News & World Report and others.
Gaelle Desbordes' work was highlighted in the October issue of the French popular science magazine Science & Vie.
The Martinos Center's Jacob Hooker is now serving as an Associate Editor for ACS Chemical Neuroscience. The journal spotlights chemical, quantitative biological, biophysical and bioengineering approaches to the understanding of the nervous system and to the development of novel treatments for neurological disorders.
Martinos Center researcher David Boas will helm a new journal to be launched by SPIE, the international society for optics and photonics, in 2014.
The Martinos Center's Anna Devor and colleagues have outlined a collective vision for what we can achieve through the NIH BRAIN Initiative.
Here's one for the record books: The Martinos Center’s Sheraz Khan and David Cohen have reported the weakest magnetic field measured. This qualifies them for the Guinness Book of World Records.