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A collection of news and information related to Electroencephalography published by this site and its partners.

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    Apr 5, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  1. Can computers decode dreams? Researchers take a first step

    Dreams defy even the dreamer, slipping away as stealthily as they arrive in a mind made credulous by sleep. But what if scientists could read our dreams by using the most advanced medical imaging machines and employing the sophisticated algorithms that flag fraudulent transactions among millions of credit card purchases?
    Dreams defy even the dreamer, slipping away as stealthily as they arrive in a mind made credulous by sleep. But what if scientists could read our dreams by using the most advanced medical imaging machines and employing the sophisticated algorithms that...

    Tags: National Institutes of Health, Science, Medical Research, University of California, Berkeley, Science and Technology

  2. May 10, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  3. Neurotech industry puts its mind to video games

    Fly toy helicopters with your mind. Be a DJ and shift musical tracks based on how you feel. Wiggle robotic cat ears by increasing your state of calm.
    Fly toy helicopters with your mind. Be a DJ and shift musical tracks based on how you feel. Wiggle robotic cat ears by increasing your state of calm. Astonishing advances in the ability to harness brain waves have made the fantastic notion of moving and...

    Tags: Intel Corp., Biofeedback, Wii, Health Treatments, Gaming Industry

  4. Apr 29, 2013 |Story| South Florida Sun-Sentinel
  5. Q&A: Ask the pediatrician! Dr. Diana Blythe answers your questions about kids' health

    <em>Have a question for Dr. Blythe? Write to her at AskThePediatrician@tribune.com. For more information on Dr. Blythe, go to <a href=&quot;http://pediatricassociates.com/" target="_blank">pediatricassociates.com</a>.</em>
    Have a question for Dr. Blythe? Write to her at AskThePediatrician@tribune.com. For more information on Dr. Blythe, go to pediatricassociates.com. April 29, 2013 Q: My 5-year-old daughter just had her adenoids and tonsils removed because of snoring...

    Tags: Health and Beauty Products, Organic Chemical Industry, Salt, Urinalysis, American Academy of Pediatrics

  6. Apr 13, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  7. We dream to remember, scientists say

    We can&rsquo;t remember everything. Maybe that&rsquo;s why we dream.
    We can’t remember everything. Maybe that’s why we dream. Researchers at Northwestern University suggest as much in a recent study in the Journal of Neuroscience. Money was involved. The 60 participants in the study were told how much...

    Tags: Philosophy, Science and Technology, Religion and Belief, Psychology

  8. Mar 4, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  9. Wait a minute: Is that patient really unconscious?

    For most of the 60,000 or so people who go under general anesthesia each day for surgeries and other medical procedures, the drugs work well &mdash; rendering a patient unconscious, immobile and unable to feel pain, as well as ensuring that he or she doesn&rsquo;t retain any memory of the procedure taking place.
    For most of the 60,000 or so people who go under general anesthesia each day for surgeries and other medical procedures, the drugs work well — rendering a patient unconscious, immobile and unable to feel pain, as well as ensuring that he or she...

    Tags: Heart Surgery, Propofol (drug), Massachusetts General Hospital, Procedural Sedation, Medical Procedures and Tests

  10. Feb 28, 2013 |Story| Daily Pilot
  11. It's not just a disease, it's genetics

    Call it kismet.
    Call it kismet. Cristy and Rick Spooner of Rancho Santa Margarita finally learned two and a half weeks ago that two of their three daughters have a rare genetic disorder, a diagnosis for which they waited more than a decade. All it took was reconnecting...

    Tags: Science, AIDS, Science and Technology, University of California, Irvine, Medical Procedures and Tests

  12. Feb 20, 2013 |Story| Reuters
  13. Just say don't: Doctors question routine tests and treatments

    Reuters
    NEW YORK (Reuters) - Now there are 135. That's how many medical tests, treatments and other procedures - many used for decades - physicians have now identified as almost always unnecessary and often harmful, and which doctors and patients should...

    Tags: Career and Workplace, American Academy of Pediatrics, Medical Procedures and Tests, Rheumatoid Arthritis, Swimmer's Ear

  14. Sep 26, 2012 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  15. Advocates say EEG therapy can guide mental energy

    Andrew Ingley wanted to improve his focus and his creativity.
    Andrew Ingley wanted to improve his focus and his creativity. So Ingley, a manager of a chiropractor's office, turned to a creative method that he says helped him in both areas: He examined and learned to control his brain waves. Ingley, 39, recently...

    Tags: Brain, Migraine, Research, Steroids, Behavioral Conditions

  16. Oct 5, 2012 |Column| WXIN-LTV
  17. Police: Video shows mom repeatedly choking 15-month-old son at hospital

    An Indianapolis mother faces more than a dozen felony charges after investigators say video showed her repeatedly choking her 15-month-old son at a hospital.
    An Indianapolis mother faces more than a dozen felony charges after investigators say video showed her repeatedly choking her 15-month-old son at a hospital. Police arrested Dashana Oldham, 20, on preliminary charges of neglect and battery after a doctor...

    Tags: Choking, Coughing, Physical Conditions

  18. Sep 13, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  19. Neuroscience mapping brain connections

    Inside the human skull lies a 3-pound mystery. The brain &mdash; a command center composed of tens of billions of branching neurons &mdash; controls who we are, what we do and how we feel.
    Inside the human skull lies a 3-pound mystery. The brain — a command center composed of tens of billions of branching neurons — controls who we are, what we do and how we feel. "It's the most amazing information structure anybody has ever...

    Tags: Manhattan (New York City), Science, National Institutes of Health, Brain, Medical Research

  20. Jul 17, 2012 | Allentown Morning Call
  21. Wait, What Did You Just Ask Me?

    Health
    Last week, at the end of my workday, I called my husband and asked, “You’re picking up Kaari and Macy, right? I don’t have to worry about picking anyone up, right?” Kaari is our daughter. Macy is our dog. One was at a summer camp....
  22. Jul 11, 2012 |Column| WXIN-LTV
  23. Why zombies, robots, clowns freak us out

    What do zombies and androids have in common? They're almost human, but not quite. That disconnect is creepy, in a way that scientists are searching to understand.
    What do zombies and androids have in common? They're almost human, but not quite. That disconnect is creepy, in a way that scientists are searching to understand. The uncanny valley is the idea that as a robot's appearance becomes more and more...

    Tags: 2001: A Space Odyssey (movie), Wall-E (movie), Ghouls and Zombies (supernatural entities), Medical Research, Movies

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