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Smalley's Research Watch
This is just a sample of the content found on this website. Please visit the website to read the entire page.
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Monday
5-15-06
The pain of waiting for pain
Few people enjoy the anticipation of a painful experience,
but some people are willing to suffer worse pain sooner rather than linger
in a state of dread. It turns out that they are not simply more anxious
or fearful than others; there is a biological
difference in people who suffer from the mere knowledge of future pain.
Neural activity in the section of the brain that processes pain increases
in people who can't stand waiting for pain. Severe dread, in other words,
is a form of pain that comes from simply thinking about upcoming pain.
Wednesday 5-10-06
Sense-able network
Physicists have come up with an answer to the mystery of how
human senses can span a wide range of inputs , from very subtle to very
powerful, when sensory nerve cells have a small dynamic range.
The answer has to do with the way nerve cells are networked. Interactions
among sensory nerve cells provide the wide dynamic range necessary to allow
us to see faint stars and the blazing sun, and to detect that subtle hint
of tobacco in a glass of cabernet sauvignon while being able to withstand,
more or less, the stench of rotting garbage.
Wednesday 4-12-06
Toward implantable sensors
Highlights from the Body
Sensor Networks 2006 workshop at MIT last week:
A computer vision system from the MIT Media Lab uses tiny
wearable cameras to read facial expressions in order to determine if someone
is paying attention, bored, confused, in disagreement, or concentrating.
The researchers are working with an autism center to use the "
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