In a significant technological leap, UF researchers have created a powerful new computational and AI tool that can generate a high-resolution 3D map of the brain in mice, enabling users to peer into the full set of molecules that produce energy for brain functions.| innovation.ufhealth.org
A University of Florida neurologist was among researchers who led a group publishing guidelines aimed at helping clinicians improve the way they deliver a dementia diagnosis.| innovation.ufhealth.org
At UF Health, an innovative procedure is providing a new option for essential tremor patients who have found little relief from medications, have contraindications to them or are ineligible for deep brain stimulation.| innovation.ufhealth.org
Researchers at the University of Florida and the UF Health Norman Fixel Institute for Neurological Diseases have developed a new kind of software that will help clinicians more accurately diagnose Parkinson's.| innovation.ufhealth.org
Research from The Herbert Wertheim UF Scripps Institute for Biomedical Innovation & Technology shows a gene called Syngap1 enables touch-based perception, while certain mutations can lead to mixed signals.| innovation.ufhealth.org
A new study from researchers at UF Health looks at another kind of organ whose cancer risk may be affected by poor diet: the lungs.| innovation.ufhealth.org
To help the 50 million people globally who live with dementia, the National Institute on Aging is finding researchers to develop tech-based breakthroughs that target the disease — researchers like UF’s “AI Queen.”| innovation.ufhealth.org
The root causes of most forms of Alzheimer’s disease largely remain a mystery. Now, researchers have revealed a new piece of the puzzle that could lead to better diagnosis and new treatments.| innovation.ufhealth.org
Tourette syndrome is more frequently underdiagnosed or diagnosed later in girls compared with boys, according to a new data analysis led by researchers at UF and Harvard Medical School with international collaborators.| innovation.ufhealth.org
Through the new Pain Research and Integrated Neuroscience Center, or PRINC, Rajesh Khanna, Ph.D., and a dozen UF researchers are combining their resources and expertise to investigate safe, healthy pain relief therapies backed by an NIH funding initiative.| innovation.ufhealth.org