A study in mice suggests infantile amnesia is not a failure of memory, but a developmentally useful process guided by brain ...
AI is ultimately a story about selfhood—and the answer will not be found in the machine, but in what mindful awareness allows us to recognize when we see ourselves reflected there.
The Express Tribune on MSN
Family ancestry slips through time
In a quiet room of a house in an old neighbourhood in Lahore, Muhammad Ashfaq shows his children a black-and-white photograph ...
A recent study in mice suggests that microglia, immune cells found in the brain, may play a role in early memory loss, or ...
Tests finding asbestos in children’s coloured sand kits have shaken UK parents; learn what’s really at risk, which products ...
Parents are increasingly reporting experiences psychologists describe as “gender disappointment” – distress or discomfort when the sex of the child does not match what they had hoped for. In our ...
ZME Science on MSN
Scientists may finally know why you can’t remember being a baby and the answer is tiny immune cells acting as memory janitors
Try to remember your first birthday party. You can probably conjure up a vague image based on a photograph your parents showed you a thousand times. That mental image is most likely false. The truth ...
The Bush family net worth is estimated at $400 million, making them one of the wealthiest and most influential political ...
Charlie Chaplin (1889–1977) gets top billing in the subtitle of Hard Streets but he’s not the star of the show. The book ...
Hosted on MSN
Trace Gallagher: This is becoming a pattern
The 'Common Sense' Department believes that when the narrative keeps changing, it’s time to tone down the rhetoric and own up to being wrong— again! 'Uninvestable': Trump pitch to oil execs yields no ...
A popular tradition in Irish names could help you trace your Irish roots. Our ancestors in Ireland had a very strong tradition of naming the eldest child in each family. It’s really interesting to see ...
Trace Gallagher: This is becoming a pattern... The 'Common Sense' Department believes that when the narrative keeps changing, it’s time to tone down the rhetoric and own up to being wrong— again!
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