Neuroscience Research

eN SiN Fruit Fly Brain
By SfN Staff
November 13, 2025

Whole mount view of a young mouse brain with all cortical layer 5 neurons expressing dystonia-related gene Klhl14, highlighted in green.

line drawing of brain inside side view of head with yellow background
By SfN Staff
November 6, 2025

Exploring how oscillatory and non-oscillatory components of neural activity shape perception and enable multisensory integration and can lead to the McGurk illusion.

eN SiN Fruit Fly Brain
By SfN Staff
October 23, 2025

Neurons in the adult fruit fly brain have different biases in the splicing of a calcium channel that enables neurotransmission.

Lange Headshot
By SfN Staff
October 9, 2025

Michał Lange entered a neuroscience lab with a strong AI/Computer Science background. Quickly catching up on his biology knowledge, he was able to create a new tool useful to the field.

eN SiN Tree Shrew Visual Thalamus square
By SfN Staff
September 18, 2025

Mouse cerebellar section with a single layer of Purkinje cells extending their elaborate dendritic branches upwards into the dense molecular layer.

Youngdoo Kim headshot
By SfN Staff
September 4, 2025

Andy Kim describes how his passion for studying cognition came about and encourages scientists to consider preregistering their studies as he details his own positive experiences with the process.

eN SiN Tree Shrew Visual Thalamus square
By SfN Staff
August 21, 2025

Excitatory axon terminals expressing vesicular glutamate transporters in the thalamus of a tree shrew.

eN SiN Paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus
By SfN Staff
July 24, 2025

Real-time calcium dynamics of astrocytes and oxytocin neurons in the mouse paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus.

line drawing of brain inside side view of head with blue background
By SfN Staff
July 10, 2025

Unveiling distinct molecular signatures for synaptic plasticity defects observed in two different mouse models for intellectual developmental disability.

Youngdoo Kim headshot
By SfN Staff
July 3, 2025

Youngdoo Kim details his experiences developing animal models for neurodegenerative disease, highlighting how rewarding it is to create useful experimental tools.