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New study refines the limits of brain mapping
When removing cancerous tissue in the brain, neurosurgeons often use "awake brain mapping" to minimize the risk of causing unintended disruptions to a patient's quality of life while removing as much ...
Leprosy carried powerful stigma in medieval Europe, but new skeletal evidence from Danish cemeteries suggests the sick were not always pushed aside in death. In medieval Denmark, burial location ...
In medieval Denmark, death could double as a display of status. The closer your grave lay to a church wall or inside a ...
In the Chicago Urban Heritage Project, College students are turning century-old insurance atlases into interactive digital ...
An international team of archaeologists used graveyards in Denmark to investigate social exclusion based on illness.
This study presents a potentially valuable exploration of the role of thalamic nuclei in language processing. The results will be of interest to researchers interested in the neurobiology of language.
Medieval Christians in Denmark showed off their wealth in death by buying prestigious graves: the closer to the church, the higher the price ...
As artificial intelligence continues to reshape industries at an unprecedented pace, venture capitalists face a critical knowledge gap: understanding how humans and AI systems collaborate most ...
Speechify's Voice AI Research Lab Launches SIMBA 3.0 Voice Model to Power Next Generation of Voice AI SIMBA 3.0 represents a major step forward in production voice AI. It is built voice-first for ...
Mouse primary motor and somatosensory cortices contain detailed information about the many time-varying arm and paw joint angles during reaching and grasping, implying a 'low-level' role in ...
Medieval Christian burials in Denmark were likely more influenced by money than supposed outward markers of sin, according to new research.
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