Neuroscience Daily: 5-minute briefing
Neuroscience Daily for 02 June follows 3 stories from r/neuro and r/neuroscience, moving through tau cell death, stdp simulator, eeg artifact reliability. 1. Tau Cell Death This story is about a Medical Xpress report on a possible tau-driven gene-expression cascade inside Alzheimer's neurons that may end in cell death. The piece says tau may do more than accumulate as a marker of disease; it may help switch on a chain reaction inside vulnerable cells that changes how genes are regulated. Source link [https://medicalxpress.com/news/2026-05-alzheimer-neurons-tau-genetic-chain.html] Reddit discussion [https://www.reddit.com/r/neuro/comments/1tt7fsp/inside_alzheimers_neurons_tau_may_set_off_a/] 2. STDP Simulator This story is about a Neuron Simulator update for spike timing dependent plasticity, or STDP, from r/neuro. The post says the latest version now runs on 64-bit Windows and can display STDP in the simulation. Source link [https://i.redd.it/jijaqd0pkb4h1.png] Reddit discussion [https://www.reddit.com/r/neuro/comments/1ts7xrh/spike_timing_delay_plasticity_stdp_simulator_runs/] 3. EEG Artifact Reliability A neuroscience forum post asks whether the Zeto One EEG system handles artifacts well, especially when a patient blinks or moves. The poster says they saw a review claiming that even a single eye blink could leave prolonged artifact across all channels, and they want to know whether that is typical in real lab use. Source link [https://www.reddit.com/r/neuro/comments/1tirw1e/zeto_one_questions/] Reddit discussion [https://www.reddit.com/r/neuro/comments/1tirw1e/zeto_one_questions/] That's it for today.
68 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Neuroscience Daily: 5-minute briefing!