Progesterone is a sex hormone with broad effects beyond the reproductive system, in particular in the brain.| Neurofrontiers
Our goal here at Neurofrontiers is to make neuroscience accessible to everyone. We hope you'll join us in this journey!| Neurofrontiers
A primer on the vastness of data, the loss of information, and the growth of intuition. The post Analyzing a virtual neuron – part 1 appeared first on Neurofrontiers.| Neurofrontiers
It's ok, this post is only five years late. The post Who runs the show appeared first on Neurofrontiers.| Neurofrontiers
There are some simple ways to maintain brain health throughout your lifespan, without needing fancy gimmicks. Here we outline six of them.| Neurofrontiers
Air pollution is increasingly recognized as having negative effects on brain health. Here we take a look at what those are.| Neurofrontiers
Could be everything, could be not much at all. The post REM sleep: what is it good for? appeared first on Neurofrontiers.| Neurofrontiers
Citizen neuroscience projects can play an important role in brain research. But how do they look like and why should you get involved?| Neurofrontiers
I needed an excuse to make a word cloud shaped like a brain, and I finally found it. The post How people find us appeared first on Neurofrontiers.| Neurofrontiers
Methylene blue is touted as yet another universal boost-all, fix-all drug, the ultimate biohacking tool. Find out why that's not exactly true.| Neurofrontiers
Or why whales aren't running the world.| Neurofrontiers
You might think math is difficult, but each one of your neurons solves equations on a daily basis and you have billions of them.| Neurofrontiers
Wait, wasn't this solved by the Romans? Anyway, my grandma ate lead paint and she was totally fine.| Neurofrontiers