心搏神经元

你是否有过糟糕的回忆,你是否想删掉它?再也不记起它? Finn: Hello and welcome to 6 Minute English. I'm Finn. Rob: And I'm Rob. Finn: Rob, I'm going to ask a personal question do you have any bad memories? Rob: Yes. When I was

发表于:2018-12-03 / 阅读(208) / 评论(0) 分类 一起听英语

This is Whats Trending Today. Are you a cat person or a dog person? People around the world are bitterly divided about which animal is the better pet. But a new study may have found a clear winner when it comes to which animal is more intelligent: do

发表于:2018-12-08 / 阅读(197) / 评论(0) 分类 2017年VOA慢速英语(十一)月

SCIENCE IN THE NEWS - Major Progress in Health Through Technology From VOA Learning English, this is SCIENCE IN THE NEWS in Special English. Im Bob Doughty. And Im Faith Lapidus. Today, we tell about a woman who can use signals from her brain to move

发表于:2018-12-16 / 阅读(169) / 评论(0) 分类 2013年VOA慢速英语(一)月

Alzheimer's disease or AD is an illness that seriously affects senior citizens. It causes memory loss, and patients may even gradually lose some of their basic physical abilities. But now researchers in the U.S. are using technology to reduce memory

发表于:2018-12-19 / 阅读(189) / 评论(0) 分类 英闻天下

This is Scientific Americans 60-Second Science, Im Cynthia Graber, this will just take a minute. Our ears are highly attuned to sounds in the world around us. Its not just the frequency of the sound itself. There are also subtle differences and shift

发表于:2018-12-24 / 阅读(174) / 评论(0) 分类 Scientific American(一)月

If you could add cells anywhere in your body, you might pick your brain. More brain cells should make you smarter, right? Well, a new study shows that they might just make you fatter. Becauseanimals that make new nerve cells in a brain region that co

发表于:2018-12-24 / 阅读(160) / 评论(0) 分类 Scientific American(五)月

Pacemakers are expensive. Though some pacemaker manufacturers have dropped the price down to $800 in poorer countries, thats still out of reach for many. One to two million people die each year because they dont have access to this life-saving techno

发表于:2018-12-24 / 阅读(181) / 评论(0) 分类 Scientific American(十)月

This is Scientific American's 60-Second Science. I'm Karen Hopkin. This will just take a minute. You probably remember exactly what you were doing when you first heard the news on 9/11. Thats because the brain has ways to file information so that thi

发表于:2018-12-24 / 阅读(210) / 评论(0) 分类 Scientific American(一)月

We all love getting something new. But then we have to move around our current clutter to find a place for it. Well, looks like things work the same way in the brain. Because according to a study published in the journal Cell, newborn neurons in the

发表于:2019-01-08 / 阅读(208) / 评论(0) 分类 Scientific American(十一)月

A friends four year old daughter recently complained to me about how badly her mosquito bite itched. She was about to burst into tears. The fact that an uncomfortable itchy sensation can drive many of us to distraction led many scientists to believe

发表于:2019-01-08 / 阅读(227) / 评论(0) 分类 Scientific American(八)月

1. NASA will have to try again tomorrow. Bad weather forced Mission Control to call off today's scheduled launch of Discovery at the last minute. NASA will try again tomorrow but bad weather is still

发表于:2019-01-08 / 阅读(228) / 评论(0) 分类 美联社新闻一分钟2006

This is the VOA Special English Health Report. A pacemaker is a small device that doctors place in people with an abnormal heartbeat. If a heart beats too slowly, the pacemaker will use electrical signals to help set a normal rate. Some devices inclu

发表于:2019-01-11 / 阅读(189) / 评论(0) 分类 2010年VOA慢速英语(六)月

Major Progress in Health Through Technology From VOA Learning English, this is SCIENCE IN THE NEWS in Special English. Im Bob Doughty. And Im Faith Lapidus. Today, we tell about a woman who can use signals from her brain to move a robotic arm. We tel

发表于:2019-01-12 / 阅读(216) / 评论(0) 分类 2013年VOA慢速英语(五)月

Think back to a really vivid memory. 回想一个生动的回忆。 Got it? Okay, now try to remember what you had for lunch three weeks ago. 想起来了吗?好的,现在想想你三周前午餐吃了什么。 That second memory probably isn't a

发表于:2019-01-17 / 阅读(192) / 评论(0) 分类 TED演讲教育篇

From VOA Learning English, this is SCIENCE IN THE NEWS in Special English. Im Bob Doughty. And Im Faith Lapidus. Today, we tell about a woman who can use signals from her brain to move a robotic arm. We tell about efforts to develop an experimental g

发表于:2019-01-24 / 阅读(210) / 评论(0) 分类 英语语言学习

JUDY WOODRUFF: Next: neuroscience and education. Thousands of teachers around the country are learning about an alternative teaching program that aims to use scientific discoveries about the brain to improve the way children learn in the classroom. S

发表于:2019-01-27 / 阅读(186) / 评论(0) 分类 PBS访谈教育系列

Scientists think it will be possible to record people's dreams and then interpret them, according to a new report. They claim to have developed a system which allows them to record higher level brain activity. Dr Moran Cerf told the journal Nature: W

发表于:2019-02-04 / 阅读(169) / 评论(0) 分类 英语新闻

The body's internal clock helps to regulate a water-storing hormone so that nightly dehydration or trips to the toilet are not the norm, research suggests. In an article published in Nature Neuroscience today, neurophysiologists Eric Trudel and Charl

发表于:2019-02-04 / 阅读(205) / 评论(0) 分类 阅读空间

Science and technology 科学技术 Surviving strokes 挺过中风 Living on 继续活着 Why some cells survive strokes while others don't 为什么有些细胞能幸免于中风,而另一些则不能 WHEN dealing with a strokea loss of blood supp

发表于:2019-02-18 / 阅读(210) / 评论(0) 分类 经济学人科技系列

Alzheimer's disease or AD is an illness that seriously affects senior citizens. It causes memory loss, and patients may even gradually lose some of their basic physical abilities. But now researchers in the U.S. are using technology to reduce memory

发表于:2019-02-21 / 阅读(165) / 评论(0) 分类 英闻天下
学英语单词
acclamatory
acinum
Agapetes refracta
asshairs
atto-gray
auols
Ban Bang Chak
behooving
bichromated gelatin
black as a raven
boarded-up
Bookmark link
boreniuss
charcoal burners
circumanal glands
citromalic acid
classical culture
commissural neuron
commuter airplane
copa
cost of labo(u)r turnover
county-level
deck hand, deckhand
deviated well
dispatch station
Dizney
drinking water pressure tank
duplex stage
eastern hajar (al hajar ash sharqi)
el bahluliye (al bahluliyah)
equibalanced
escape with one's life
ethics of teachers
fleshinesses
flow feeder
freely available
frost- call
fusion-cast refractory
gain attenuator
gemena
General Arrangement of Borrowing
get off one's tail
glandulae Parotis
glycerol triglycidyl ether
gramaire
half value period
half-life determination
high spirits
hore angle
in less than a pig's whisper
Intel Insider
irrelentlessly
Isidrina
Java supers
labor
lace hole
leukoma adhaerens
maja spinigera
Mapico
melnyk
metal-bearing
mistura
Ninghainia
personal-circuit
photoelectric scribing
polyphase series motor
port
rare earth doping
real del castillo
receiving lens system
reducible polynomail
right square
Rokko-sammyaku
Schistosoma hematobium
Seabee barge
shopwatch
SIUYA
skybald
slangies
snow blowers
soda pop
sodium diprotrizoate
solid zoning
sperrschicht cell
star begonias
subcrureus
tanweens
thelematic
thermometer resistor
three-decker
transition error
transurethral resection of bladder tumor
Tummel Bridge
turn-length
unclear star
uncrossed cheque
undertowed
uranyl phosphate(monohydrogen)
vader
valley oaks
Vershino-Darasunskiy
vertical shaft motor