Audio Research News

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Your latest update from The Transmitter, an essential resource for the neuroscience community, dedicated to helping scientists at all career stages stay current and build connections. Read more: https://www.thetransmitter.org/

Recent Episodes
  • Amina Abubakar translates autism research and care for Kenya
    May 29, 2025 – 08:04
  • Learning in living mice defies classic synaptic plasticity rule
    May 28, 2025 – 05:42
  • Cephalopods, vision's next frontier
    May 27, 2025 – 14:23
  • Escaping groupthink: What animals' behavioral quirks reveal about the brain
    May 23, 2025 – 10:05
  • Immune cells block pain in female mice only
    May 22, 2025 – 05:30
  • The BabyLM Challenge: In search of more efficient learning algorithms, researchers look to infants
    May 19, 2025 – 08:31
  • Reporter's notebook: Highlights from INSAR 2025
    May 15, 2025 – 06:12
  • NIDA shutters diversity fellowship program, axes active awards
    May 14, 2025 – 04:53
  • 'We still exist': How four neuroscience advocacy groups are navigating federal DEI funding cuts
    May 14, 2025 – 17:57
  • This paper changed my life: Marino Pagan recalls a decision-making study from four titans in the field
    May 13, 2025 – 06:49
  • Exclusive: Recruitment issues jeopardize ambitious plan for human brain atlas
    May 9, 2025 – 06:28
  • How pragmatism and passion drive Fred Volkmar-even after retirement
    May 8, 2025 – 10:15
  • Sleep doesn't just consolidate memories; it actively shapes them
    May 6, 2025 – 05:52
  • Thinking about thinking: AI offers theoretical insights into human memory
    May 5, 2025 – 08:13
  • Mitochondrial 'landscape' shifts across human brain
    Apr 25, 2025 – 06:41
  • This paper changed my life: Shane Liddelow on two papers that upended astrocyte research
    Apr 23, 2025 – 06:37
  • What birds can teach us about the 'biological truth' of sex
    Apr 22, 2025 – 08:28
  • Noninvasive technologies can map and target human brain with unprecedented precision
    Apr 21, 2025 – 09:02
  • During decision-making, brain shows multiple distinct subtypes of activity
    Apr 18, 2025 – 06:46
  • Smell studies often use unnaturally high odor concentrations, analysis reveals
    Apr 16, 2025 – 08:24
  • Functional MRI can do more than you think
    Apr 14, 2025 – 08:03
  • U.S. human data repositories 'under review' for gender identity descriptors
    Apr 9, 2025 – 03:49
  • Inhibitory cells work in concert to orchestrate neuronal activity in mouse brain
    Apr 9, 2025 – 06:16
  • Exclusive: NIH nixes funds for several pre- and postdoctoral training programs
    Apr 8, 2025 – 08:50
  • To make a meaningful contribution to neuroscience, fMRI must break out of its silo
    Apr 8, 2025 – 08:03
  • In vivo veritas: Xenotransplantation can help us study the development and function of human neurons in a living brain
    Apr 7, 2025 – 09:11
  • Keep sex as a biological variable: Don't let NIH upheaval turn back the clock on scientific rigor
    Mar 25, 2025 – 07:28
  • Single-neuron recordings are helping to unravel complexities of human cognition
    Mar 14, 2025 – 09:30
  • U.S. BRAIN Initiative set to lose $81 million this year
    Mar 11, 2025 – 03:26
  • New tools help make neuroimaging accessible to more researchers
    Mar 5, 2025 – 06:04
  • About-faces in U.S. federal science funding put neuroscientists on edge
    Feb 12, 2025 – 06:16
  • Age-related brain changes in mice strike hypothalamus 'hot spot'
    Jan 16, 2025 – 05:43
  • Males and females show different patterns of risk for brain-based conditions. Ignoring these differences does us all a disservice.
    Dec 18, 2024 – 09:04
  • Immune cell interlopers breach-and repair-brain barrier in mice
    Nov 22, 2024 – 06:05
  • NeuroAI: A field born from the symbiosis between neuroscience, AI
    Nov 15, 2024 – 07:22
  • Timing tweak turns trashed fMRI scans into treasure
    Oct 30, 2024 – 05:53
  • Brains, biases and amyloid beta: Why the female brain deserves a closer look in Alzheimer's research
    Oct 25, 2024 – 08:04
  • This paper changed my life: 'Spontaneous cortical activity reveals hallmarks of an optimal internal model of the environment,' from the Fiser Lab
    Oct 18, 2024 – 05:33
  • The S-index Challenge: Develop a metric to quantify data-sharing success
    Oct 10, 2024 – 05:43
  • A scientific fraud. An investigation. A lab in recovery.
    Oct 8, 2024 – 27:16
  • Repeat scans reveal brain changes that precede childbirth
    Oct 1, 2024 – 08:54
  • Reconstructing dopamine's link to reward
    Sep 25, 2024 – 19:37
  • In updated U.S. autism bill, Congress calls for funding boost, expanded scope
    Sep 10, 2024 – 05:35
  • From reductionism to dynamical systems: How two books influenced my thinking across 30 years of neuroscience
    Aug 29, 2024 – 04:01
  • Neuroscience needs a career path for software engineers
    Aug 20, 2024 – 07:02
  • Nonsense correlations and how to avoid them
    Aug 15, 2024 – 06:13
  • Is it time to worry about brain chimeras?
    Aug 8, 2024 – 09:26
  • Martin Giurfa's concept of home
    Aug 1, 2024 – 15:06
  • Women are systematically under-cited in neuroscience. New tools can change that.
    Jul 24, 2024 – 05:29
  • Future of BRAIN Initiative funding remains unclear
    Jul 15, 2024 – 04:11
Recent Reviews
  • ProfNeuroNicole
    Really great
    As a busy neuroscientist looking to hear more about the latest in brain research, this is a terrific resource. Thank you for making it available!
  • mico’s star
    short intro; goes straight to the point
    that’s what hooked me to listen further; knowing that i rarely listen to a podcast or use a podcast app like Apple Podcasts unless i choose to!
  • adam Ezekiel kulper
    Adam kulper
    I have autism I am twisted metal fan I am superheroes fan Jin Roh The wolf Brigade fan Gamer .
  • d4ni3lleSLP
    Good info, but fast
    Great If you’re looking for someone else to do the nitty gritty of finding and reading the research on autism so that you can just listen to the important parts! host speaks very quickly and to grasp the presented research you likely need some solid background understanding. Science and research focused (as the podcast name suggests) and perhaps less useful for parents/educators working with autistic individuals.
  • critical mother
    Like listening to grass grow.
    At turns boring and horrifying. Here’s three minutes straight of polysyllabic science! There’s breathless findings from postmortem studies of brain tissue, which only makes you stop and think of how that particular autistic person ended up with his brain on slides...
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