Not exact matches
They found that the model's stem cells
differentiate (specialize) into the various cells of the
brain in the same way that they do in the first trimester of
human development.
Recent research by neuroscientist Fred Gage and colleagues at the University of California (UC), San Diego, has shown that one of the most common types of jumping gene in people, called L1, is particularly abundant in
human stem cells in the
brain that ultimately
differentiate into neurons and plays an important role in regulating neuronal
development and proliferation.
Scientists believe that the ability to use our
brain to
differentiate between words and intonation was a huge step in the
human evolution and
development of speech.