Frontiers | Magnetic Materials in Promoting Bone Regeneration
Frequent lucid dreaming associated with increased functional connectivity between frontopolar cortex and temporoparietal association areas | Scientific Reports
Scientists measure dream content for the first time | Max-Planck-Gesellschaft
Scientists measure dream content for the first time | Max-Planck-Gesellschaft
Frontiers | How Processing of Sensory Information From the Internal and External Worlds Shape the Perception and Engagement With the World in the Aftermath of Trauma: Implications for PTSD
Brain mechanisms of insomnia: new perspectives on causes and consequences | Physiological Reviews
Brain Basics: Understanding Sleep | National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
Self-Assembly of Colloidal Nanocrystals: From Intricate Structures to Functional Materials | Chemical Reviews
Human Brainwaves' "Hum" Responds to Changes in the Magnetic Field | The Scientist Magazine®
Did Covid Change How We Dream? - The New York Times
Building intelligent cell-inspired microrobots | ERC
NREM sleep spindles are associated with dream recall in: Sleep Spindles & Cortical Up States Volume 1 Issue 1 (2017)
Frontiers | Lucid Dreaming Brain Network Based on Tholey's 7 Klartraum Criteria
The hunt for a primordial force that would revolutionise cosmology | New Scientist
Modulating dream experience: Noninvasive brain stimulation over the sensorimotor cortex reduces dream movement | Scientific Reports
Dreaming and the brain: from phenomenology to neurophysiology: Trends in Cognitive Sciences
Actuators | Free Full-Text | An Origami Flexiball-Inspired Metamaterial Actuator and Its In-Pipe Robot Prototype
Generation of megatesla magnetic fields by intense-laser-driven microtube implosions | Scientific Reports
Did Covid Change How We Dream? - The New York Times
Lofty Only in Sound: Crossed Wires and Community in 19th-Century Dreams – The Public Domain Review
Photocatalysis Enhanced by External Fields - Hu - 2021 - Angewandte Chemie International Edition - Wiley Online Library
The Most Famous Paradox in Physics Nears Its End | Quanta Magazine
Ayahuasca compound changes brainwaves to vivid 'waking-dream' state | Imperial News | Imperial College London