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Senator and former Shands intern returns to UF

13 hours ago ago from insider - UF College of Medicine News Resource - University of Florida

Florida state senator and former Shands at the University of Florida intern Durell Peaden Jr., M.D., will return to campus Thursday, Dec. 17 for a firsthand look at programs he fought to fund over the years. Following a tour of the UF McKnight Brain Institute’s centers for Brain Tumor Research and Movement Disorders, and Deep Brain Stimulation Lab, Peaden will be joined by faculty, staff and friends of the college and the MBI who have ...

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Types of Brain Tumors and their Treatment | All About Radiation Treatments

23 hours ago ago from All About Radiation Treatments

All About Radiation Treatments Home TYPES OF BRAIN TUMORS AND THEIR TREATMENT Dec 15, 2009 Your Ad Here Astrocytomas paint the many usual type of glioma. They rise from the ancillary cells of the brain, which are star-shaped glial cells called astrocytes. In children, many astrocytomas are deliberate low-grade, whilst in adults many are high-grade. They start in many tools of the brain, ...

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Wednesday Round Up #94

10 hours ago ago from Neuroanthropology

After the top selections, a great selection of research papers on primate cultures, human evolution and the like (including a lot of pdfs). And then mind and anthro. Top of the List Lisa Wynn, CEAUSSIC Publishes Final Report on HTS The American Anthropological Association committee examining the Human Terrain System provides its final say, emphasizing the incompatibility of the HTS with disciplinary ethics Harvey Whitehouse, ...

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Volunteering and Youth Engagement Helps Elderly

7 hours ago ago from Club Zana

New research shows that volunteering helps keep the brain active and healthier in aging adults

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This just sounds painful to me

18 hours ago ago from MEBlog

Guitarists' Brains Swing Together ScienceDaily (Mar. 18, 2009) — When musicians play along together it isn't just their instruments that are in time – their brain waves are too. New research shows how EEG readouts from pairs of guitarists become more synchronized, a finding with wider potential implications for how our brains interact when we do.

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