Stress can disrupt memory and lead to needless anxiety — here’s how
In mice, stress altered the way that the brain packaged memories, resulting in an unnecessary fear response — but drugs were able to reverse the effect.
In mice, stress altered the way that the brain packaged memories, resulting in an unnecessary fear response — but drugs were able to reverse the effect.
In mice, stress altered the way that the brain formed memories, resulting in an unnecessary fear response.
Human children pair fast growth of a large brain with slow body growth. Ancient Homo fossil teeth reveal that hominin dental growth rates began to slow before there was a major increase in brain size compared with apes.