New research suggests that exercise difficulty isn’t just about muscles or fitness, it’s about perception. By subtly altering ...
The cerebellum ("little brain") is tucked underneath the basal ganglia; it sits in the back of the skull below the cerebrum. Source: CLIPAREA l Custom media/Shutterstock Neuroscientists have unearthed ...
Research reveals a striking discovery about the human brain and exercise motivation. Scientists have identified distinct patterns of electrical connectivity that separate individuals who eagerly ...
You know exercise is good for you, but your brain still resists it like it’s punishment rather than reward. The problem isn’t willpower or discipline – it’s that your neural pathways haven’t learned ...
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Why some find sports enjoyable and others exhausting?
Why do some people find sports enjoyable while others find them exhausting? The answer is not limited to physical fitness; ...
In a highly novel study published in Current Biology, researchers at the University of Alabama at Birmingham and the National Institute of Mental Health, or NIMH, describe how two major neuronal ...
Social feedback shapes human behavior and self-perception in profound ways. New research suggests that the personality trait ...
In a groundbreaking revelation, Stanford’s top neuroscientist, Dr. Andrew Huberman, has announced a critical finding: smartphones are diminishing our brain’s ability to feel motivated. This discovery ...
Feeling warm or cold doesn’t just register on the skin—it changes how connected we feel to our own bodies. Research shows ...
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