The first two days of CRSP training grounds teachers in the theory and research
on brain behavior and learning styles, and introduces them to powerful reading strategies that are easy to teach and produce high reading gains quickly.
Not exact matches
With a guest
on each episode, he aims to give listeners some answers to any questions they may surrounding the
behavior, mind,
brain and creativity.
According to neuropsychologist Tim Jennings from the Conquer Series, «Any type of repetitive
behavior will create trails in our
brain that are going to fire
on an automatic sequence.»
According to neuropsychologist Tim Jennings, «Any type of repetitive
behavior will create trails in our
brain that are going to fire
on an automatic sequence.»
Those messages may not have the same measurable neurochemical effects
on a ten - year - old
brain as they do
on a ten - month - old
brain, but they do have a profound impact
on students» psychology and thus
on their
behavior.
Available free of charge
on MomsTEAM's new SmartTeams concussion website, the #TeamUp4ConcussionSafetyTM program, developed by MomsTEAM Institute as part of its SmartTeams Play SafeTM initiative with a Mind Matters Educational Challenge Grant from the National Collegiate Athletic Association and Department of Defense, is designed to do just that: to increase reporting by athletes of concussion symptoms by engaging coaches, athletes, parents, and health care providers in a season - long, indeed career - long program which emphasizes that immediate reporting of concussion symptoms - not just by athletes themselves but by their teammate «buddies» - not only reduces the risk the athlete will suffer a more serious
brain injury - or, in rare cases, even death - but is actually helps the team's chances of winning, not just in that game, but, by giving athletes the best chance to return as quickly as possible from concussion, the rest of the season, and by teaching that honest reporting is a valued team
behavior and a hallmark of a good teammate.
Once we can talk about feelings, the feelings which are
on the non-verbal side of the
brain connect to the words
on the other side of the
brain and we have so much control and therefore, we have control over our
behavior.
There are actually behavioral therapies in which we actually show the child how to manage his own
behavior with his own
brain, instead of relying
on the medication.
According to Bessel van der Kolk, M.D., psychiatrist and leading expert
on trauma and how it affects the
brain, as many as 80 % of abused and neglected infants and children develop disorganized / disoriented attachment relationships, which are expressed as unpredictable approach and avoidance patterns towards mother, the inability to accept comfort from caregivers, rage at attachment figures, and pathological self - regulatory
behaviors.
In this slim volume, Tough pulls together decades of social science research
on the impacts of poverty and trauma
on kids»
brains and
behavior, and makes a cogent, convincing argument for why this research should lie at the center of any discussions about reform.
Similar mechanisms are found in human
brains — caregiver
behavior matters for turning genes
on and off.
Armed with a deeper understanding of
brain development and the impact
on a child's
behavior who has had a tough start in life, parents can better explore how to best help their child heal.
In various studies conducted, BPA was found to have an effect
on the
brain,
behavior and prostate gland of fetuses.
She found that milestone achievement was abnormal in these monkeys: at six to eight weeks they were slow in starting to manipulate, and at ten months the increase in «motor disturbance
behaviors» that normally occurs was prolonged.101 The author concludes, «These effects could occur as a result of effects
on vulnerable
brain processes during a sensitive period, interference with programming of [normal]
brain development by endogenous [internal] agents or alteration in early experiences.»
The National Toxicology Program issued a report in September 2008, noting «some concern» about the effects
on the
brain, prostate gland, and
behavior in fetuses, infants, and children.
Promoting optimal development and function may help keep these newborns»
brains on track to establish the sensory building blocks of cognition,
behavior and communication, the researchers concluded.
The breastfeeding mothers,
on average, had higher activity in the parts of their
brains linked to nurturing
behaviors and showed greater sensitivity to their babies when seen again at four months postpartum.
New research suggests that these techniques can have detrimental physiological effects
on the baby by increasing the stress hormone cortisol in the
brain, with potential long term effects to emotional regulation, sleep patterns and
behavior.
The findings reported in Current Biology
on November 30 show that stress leads to an apparent disconnect between babies»
brain activity and their
behavior.
They focused
on the striatum, a
brain region implicated in drug addiction because of its central role in habit formation and goal - directed
behavior.
The Blue
Brain Project Scientists rely
on computer models to understand the toughest concepts in science: the origin of the universe, the
behavior of atoms, and the future climate of the planet.
The team's analyses, which covered 90 species, revealed that
brain size was best predicted by a score based
on various social
behaviors such as cooperation with other species, group hunting and complex vocalizations.
«Our results using an animal model suggest that a maternal high - fat diet during pregnancy and lactation could have significant and lasting effects
on the
brain,
behavior and cognition of rat pups,» said Dr. Tamashiro.
Markram's model will electronically mirror the real
brain's biological
behaviors, imitating mathematically the interactions among individual neurons and the effects of neurotransmitters
on those cells.
In a report
on the research published online last week in the journal
Brain, Behavior and Immunity, the investigators say that the part of the brain responsible for memory and spatial navigation (the hippocampus) was smaller over the long term in the male offspring exposed to the overactive immune system in the
Brain,
Behavior and Immunity, the investigators say that the part of the
brain responsible for memory and spatial navigation (the hippocampus) was smaller over the long term in the male offspring exposed to the overactive immune system in the
brain responsible for memory and spatial navigation (the hippocampus) was smaller over the long term in the male offspring exposed to the overactive immune system in the womb.
«With training, animals stopped producing overt
behavior and started relying
on brain activity.»
«Nurture impacts nature: Experiences leave genetic mark
on brain,
behavior.»
Anatomy confirms what
behavior reveals: Octopuses and cuttlefish have larger
brains, relative to body weight, than most fish and reptiles, larger
on average than any animals save birds and mammals.
About this Book: This Is Your
Brain on Parasites: How Tiny Creatures Manipulate Our
Behavior and Shape Society Kathleen McAuliffe Houghton Miffllin Harcourt, 2016
These patterns occur at predictable frequencies that depend
on what a person is doing and
on what part of the
brain is active during the
behavior.
And once I got into
brain biology, it became clear you needed to study the
brain on the cellular level, and once you began to understand aspects of
behavior in the cellular level, you wanted to understand the molecular level.
Neuroscientists are shedding new light
on these questions by uncovering how
brain lesions can lead to criminal
behavior.
Imagine you are serving
on a jury: the defendant is charged with murder, but he also suffers from a
brain tumor that causes erratic
behavior.
Further research would be helpful in determining the likelihood that patients who suffer
brain lesions in the «criminality - associated network» actually go
on to commit crimes, with the expectation that this kind of impairment will emerge as one of many factors increasing the risk of criminal
behavior.
Although malnutrition during pregnancy is known to lead to poor outcomes for babies, «the functional long - term consequences of maternal malnutrition
on the
brains and
behavior of their progeny are mostly unknown,» the researchers noted.
Describing himself as a «neuro - ethologist,» Brockmann hopes that the comparative studies
on three species native to India — A. cerana, A. dorsata, and A. florea — will help him understand the evolution of dance communication and identify the changes in the
brain that accompanied the changes in
behavior.
This Is Your
Brain on Parasites: How Tiny Creatures Manipulate Our
Behavior and Shape Society by Kathleen McAuliffe Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2016 ($ 27; 288 pages)
Mounted
on a rat's head, the 1.5 - inch plastic and titanium instrument allows the animal to move freely and captures in real time how
brain cells interact during everyday
behaviors.
An astonishing number of things that scientists know about
brains and
behavior are based
on small groups of highly educated, mostly white people between the ages of 18 and 21.
The bulkier white matter may be what gives men their ability to focus intently
on work and tune out distractions, as well as their clear - cut superiority when it comes to spatial reasoning, says Ruben Gur, a psychologist and director of the
Brain Behavior Laboratory at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.
Instead, Faro and Mohamed say that developing this method into a viable lie - detection system will depend
on discovering complex patterns of
brain behavior linked to lying.
The researchers discovered that the ability to stop depended
on the activity of the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), a region of the
brain implicated in executive control over
behavior.
Moberly observed that freeze
behavior, breathing rate, and electrical activity of these
brain regions were coordinated literally
on the same wavelength.
«If we can sort out the many interactions between these chemicals and
brain activity based
on sensory perception and context, then we can possibly target specific excitatory and inhibitory neurological pathways to rebalance and influence
behaviors,» says Froemke.
But, linking screen time to what's going
on in the
brain and to
behavior is hard.
What we found is that the ability of this chronic social stress to produce maladaptive changes in
brain and
behavior — loss of pleasure, inability to sleep normally and so
on — are mediated through epigenetic modifications of gene expression, in particular, emotional centers of the
brain.
The article, A pilot study examining functional
brain activity 6 months after memory retraining in MS: the MEMREHAB trial, was published online ahead of print on June 14 by Brain Imaging and Beha
brain activity 6 months after memory retraining in MS: the MEMREHAB trial, was published online ahead of print
on June 14 by
Brain Imaging and Beha
Brain Imaging and
Behavior.
Here the results showed that a single stimulation had different effects
on the
behavior of neurons in each layer because even when the overall state of the
brain changed, layers had distinctive characteristics.
Dr. Gradinaru's research interests focus
on developing tools and methods for neuroscience (optogenetic actuators and sensors; tissue clearing and imaging) as well as
on investigating the mechanisms underlying deep
brain stimulation (DBS) and
on the long - term effects of DBS
on neuronal health, function, and ultimately
behavior.
The findings, published recently in Neuron, reveal reneging
on an intended
behavior involves coordinated cross talk between several
brain regions.