by Maria Kostyanaya | Apr 20, 2015 | Research Front
What does brain activity tell us about feelings of guilt or justification of extreme violence? A recent study sheds some light on the neuroscience of moral behaviour; an important subject for psychotherapeutic practice and our understanding of human decision making in...
by Maria Kostyanaya | Apr 8, 2015 | Research Front
Brain research shows: Not trying too hard might help us learn quicker Scott Grafton and colleagues from the University of California, the University of Pennsylvania, and Johns Hopkins University have been studying why some people are able to master a new skill rather...
by Maria Kostyanaya | Feb 14, 2015 | Journal
Russian psychology and neuropsychotherapy: Comparative analysis Maria I. Kostyanaya “Все новое - это хорошо забытое старое” Transliteration “Everything new is well forgotten old” Translation “There is nothing new under the sun” Russian proverb For printing or...
by Maria Kostyanaya | Dec 14, 2014 | Research Front
Developing the tools to predict mental conditions: Brain representations of social thoughts and autism diagnosis Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) researchers have created brain-reading techniques to use neural representations of social thoughts to predict autism...
by Maria Kostyanaya | Dec 4, 2014 | Neuroscience, News
Physiotherapy plus psychology: new ideas on stroke rehabilitation The latest research conducted at Victoria University in Melbourne may provide useful applications for the care of stroke patients who have restricted use of their upper limbs. If stroke sufferers...