Australian Brain Alliance in Canberra, Australian Capital Territory | Organisation
Australian Brain Alliance
Locality: Canberra, Australian Capital Territory
Address: Ian Potter House, 9 Gordon Street 2601 Canberra, ACT, Australia
Website: https://www.brainalliance.org.au/
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25.01.2022 Your brain might account for only about three percent of your body weight, but it receives about 30 percent of the blood being pumped by your heart. This shows how much attention and support it requires in comparison to the other seemingly important areas of your body. #BrainFactFriday
24.01.2022 What sparked your interest in neuroscience? "A wonderful mentor during my undergraduate degree who inspired me to pursue a career in neuroscience." Professor Linda Richards from Queensland Brain Institute and Chair of the Australian Brain Alliance. #scienceweek
23.01.2022 Blooming axons: this image comes from the hippocampus, a region of the brain important for learning and memory. Image by Iris Wang.
23.01.2022 The human brain uses less energy than a light bulb. However, it is capable of computational activity such as intuitive natural language understanding, a task which would require the worlds most powerful computers that consume megawatts of power.
22.01.2022 No single definitive cause for schizophrenia has been identified, though there is a strong genetic predisposition for the condition. Read more in our fact sheet: https://www.brainalliance.org.au/learn/fact-sheets/
22.01.2022 We are asking all Australians who believe making progress in our understanding of the brain is important, to become Brain Champions. Sign up today! http://bit.ly/2Irvv0P
22.01.2022 It is believed that the first sense a human brain learns to detect is touch; however, it takes around 12 weeks to understand the complete feeling. This is the reason the mind can efficiently differentiate between external and self-touch to the body. #BrainFactFriday
21.01.2022 Easier diagnosis of rare disorder, beta propeller associated neurodegeneration (BPAN), provides relief for families.
21.01.2022 This National Science Week sign up to become an Australian Brain Champion to help our researchers crack the brains code #scienceweek http://bit.ly/2Irvv0P
21.01.2022 The precise causes of ADHD have not yet been identified. The fact that ADHD can run in families suggests a strong genetic link. Read more in our fact sheet: https://www.brainalliance.org.au/learn/fact-sheets/ #crackthebrainscode
21.01.2022 In a world first, scientists from The John Curtin School of Medical Research - JCSMR have successfully grown a brain-on-a-chip. The new tech could help sufferers of degenerative diseases like Parkinsons and Alzheimers.
20.01.2022 Stroke is common, is not always preventable and can happen to anyone at anytime. It is not just a disease of the older generation. One third of all stroke survivors in Australia are under the age of 65. #strokeweek #BrainFactFriday
19.01.2022 Add your voice to the hundreds of Australians who want to see more done to Crack the Brains Code - become an Australian Brain Champion today: http://bit.ly/2Irvv0P
18.01.2022 "The two do seem very similar, when you look at them side by side. So it’s easy to think that the universe we live in might be the brain of a giant body. But actually, there’s another reason why the cosmic web and the brain cells look so alike: it’s because the laws of physics are the same everywhere."
18.01.2022 In 2017 there was almost 56,000 new and recurrent strokes that is one stroke every nine minutes. Our researchers need to #crackthebrainscode so we can better understand stroke. You can help by becoming a Brain Champion today! http://bit.ly/2Irvv0P #strokeweek2018
18.01.2022 How walking keeps your brain developing
17.01.2022 Add your voice to the hundreds of Australians who want to see more done to Crack the Brain's Code - become an Australian Brain Champion today: http://bit.ly/2Irvv0P
17.01.2022 The human brain is the ultimate model to revolutionise computing. Brain-inspired computing is already driving much of modern artificial intelligence research. Read more in our fact sheet: http://ow.ly/TwAw30lpnEm
17.01.2022 Twitter, often discounted for its brevity and superficiality, is offering people with traumatic brain injuries powerful new ways to communicate, connect and enjoy everyday life. UTS: University of Technology Sydney
16.01.2022 This September is Dystonia Awareness Month. Dystonia is a neurological movement disorder that causes muscles in the body to contract or spasm involuntarily. The involuntary muscle contractions cause twisting, repetitive and patterned movements as well as abnormal postures. Australian Dystonia Support Group
15.01.2022 What sparked your interest in neuroscience? "As a kid, I was always inquisitive and wanting to know how things worked. I was always taking appliances apart which resulted in me electrocuting myself and being sent on electronic camps. However, as a teenager my interest switched to wanting to understand how the complex circuitry of the brain worked." Associate Professor James Bourne from Australian Regenerative Medicine Institute #scienceweek
15.01.2022 What sparked your interest in neuroscience? "In high school a social science teacher gave us a couple of lessons in psychology: Why do people do the things they do? How do our senses allow us to represent the world around us? How do we recognise faces and understand spoken language? How do we learn, remember, plan and act? What makes us conscious? I found these questions endlessly fascinating. But what I really wanted to know was how our brains had evolved to allow us to do all these things. Scientists seemed to know a great deal about how individual brain cells work, but very little about how complex networks of cells give rise to behaviour. That was my inspiration for studying neuroscience. Professor Jason Mattingley, Foundation Chair in Cognitive Neuroscience at Queensland Brain Institute. #ScienceWeek
12.01.2022 Patrick Clementson shares his story on living with CADASIL, and how it runs in his family. Read his story here: https://www.brainalliance.org.au//a-familys-history-with-/
12.01.2022 Where art meets science. A forest of neurons. Cortical (brain) neurons here are stained and magnified 20 times. Image by Chanel Taylor.
12.01.2022 Named for their stellar shape, astrocytes branching arms let them lend a helping hand in a wide variety of neural tasks. Bridging the gap between neurons, they recycle the chemicals that drive neuron-to-neuron messaging, and clean up any leftover chemical dispatches. Other arms latch onto blood vessels, helping to control blood flow.
11.01.2022 The symptoms and effects of stroke depend upon where in the brain the damage occurs. Damage to the right side of the brain usually affects the left side of the body, and vice versa. Read more about the impact strokes have by downloading our fact sheet: https://www.brainalliance.org.au/learn/fact-sheets/ #strokeweek2018
11.01.2022 What sparked your interest in neuroscience? "As a PhD student in London in the late 80s when I was testing children with neurodevelopmental brain disorders and found that despite similar intellectual abilities across different disorders- I could capture disorder-specific cognitive profiles that were genetic based. This has sparked 20 years of research." professor Kim Cornish from MICCN. #scienceweek
10.01.2022 While some cases of epilepsy have been linked to injury, stroke or brain infections, for more than half of epilepsy cases, the cause is unknown. #crackthebrainscode #scienceweek
09.01.2022 Where art meets science. A forest of neurons. Cortical (brain) neurons here are stained and magnified 20 times. Image by Chanel Taylor.
09.01.2022 Stroke is one of the biggest killers - it kills more women than breast cancer and more men than prostate cancer. #strokeweek2018
08.01.2022 Great to see our Brain Champion Debra Lane reaching out to her Federal MP Ian Goodenough MP
08.01.2022 "The two do seem very similar, when you look at them side by side. So its easy to think that the universe we live in might be the brain of a giant body. But actually, theres another reason why the cosmic web and the brain cells look so alike: its because the laws of physics are the same everywhere."
07.01.2022 New research "shows when fathers experience mental illness, their children are at higher risk of behavioural and emotional difficulties." This Fathers Day make sure you ask if they are okay, its one small act that can help in many ways.
06.01.2022 What sparked your interest in neuroscience? "Being a biomaterials scientist, I have always been passionate about creating more effective medical technologies. I want to understand how neural devices, and the materials that form these devices, interact with brain tissue and work out better technologies for overcoming trauma and disease." Professor Laura Poole-Warren from UNSW. #scienceweek
06.01.2022 No single definitive cause for schizophrenia has been identified, though there is a strong genetic predisposition for the condition. Read more in our fact sheet: https://www.brainalliance.org.au/learn/fact-sheets/
06.01.2022 BrainPark at the Monash Institute in Melbourne will use neuroscience combined with virtual reality and exercise to treat people with addictions
05.01.2022 Chronic pain results when changes to the nervous system mean that the nerves keep firing, sending pain signals to the brain. Sometimes the body becomes highly sensitised and even very slight stimuli can provoke a strong pain response.
04.01.2022 Brain freeze is actually your brain recognizing a drop in temperature. The scientific term is sphenopalatine ganglioneuralgia and is a way for your brain to say that it is turning up the brakes on what you are doing to prevent unwanted changes due to temperature. #BrainFactFriday #scienceweek
03.01.2022 What sparked your interest in neuroscience? "Learning from a University teacher about drugs that affect the brain for better or worse." Professor Glenda Halliday from the Brain And Mind Centre. #scienceweek
03.01.2022 This week is National Stroke Week. Stroke is one of the biggest killers in Australia. If we crack the brains code we can understand more about how the brain works and potentially develop ways to better treat those who have suffered from stroke. You can help #crackthebrainscode by becoming a Brain Champion today: http://bit.ly/2Irvv0P #strokeweek2018
02.01.2022 Neuroblasts feature prominently in the explosion of growth that takes place while embryos develop. But they also hang around into adulthood, helping the production of new brain cells and aiding recovery from brain injury and stroke. #strokeweek2018
01.01.2022 One haircut at a time: A NSW hairdresser addresses inequality for people with autism.
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