Three animals inspiring the armor of the future0
- From Around the Web, Science & Technology
- October 4, 2017
Seashells, fish, and spiders may hold the key to better bulletproof vests.
Seashells, fish, and spiders may hold the key to better bulletproof vests.
That sea-horse shaped chunk of grey matter deep inside our skull called the hippocampus has a job on its resume we’ve never seen before – sensory enhancer.
Latest UFO sightings from Britain show a mysterious object hovering in the skies above one of Britain’s most famous UFO hotspots.
Biohacking is a relatively new field of amateur and professional scientists conducting “do-it-yourself” biology experiments.
Abstract
Humans uniquely appreciate aesthetics, experiencing pleasurable responses to complex stimuli that confer no clear intrinsic value for survival. However, substantial variability exists in the frequency and specificity of aesthetic responses. While pleasure from aesthetics is attributed to the neural circuitry for reward, what accounts for individual differences in aesthetic reward sensitivity remains unclear. Using a combination of survey data, behavioral and psychophysiological measures and diffusion tensor imaging, we found that white matter connectivity between sensory processing areas in the superior temporal gyrus and emotional and social processing areas in the insula and medial prefrontal cortex explains individual differences in reward sensitivity to music. Our findings provide the first evidence for a neural basis of individual differences in sensory access to the reward system, and suggest that social–emotional communication through the auditory channel may offer an evolutionary basis for music making as an aesthetically rewarding function in humans.
The researcher is a reminder of the importance of keeping regular sleep patterns
For the past couple of decades, someone or something has been killing Tom Miller’s cattle and leaving the bodies in random places
Google has big plans for quantum computing.
Ancient sedimentary rocks in Labrador have been found to contain the oldest-known evidence of life on Earth.
A new iceberg calved from Pine Island Glacier—one of the main outlets where ice from the interior of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet flows into the ocean.