Nestled in the core of the brain is the hippocampus, a little curve of tissue central to memory and learning. It serves as a ...
The "talk test" is often used as a low-tech way to measure exercise intensity: If you can easily talk or even sing, your ...
You are halfway through a job interview, reaching for the right word, and it slips out: “um.” The hiring manager’s eyebrow ...
Those efforts could reveal whether this potentially universal tempo is a fundamental feature of neural systems and possibly lead to new insights into how it influences behavior across species. "It's ...
Northwestern University scientists have identified a universal “communication tempo” of roughly 2 hertz across diverse species. This rhythm—found in everything from cricket chirps to pop music—likely ...
Animals communicate in vastly different ways, but scientists lack a unifying explanation for why these diverse signals cluster around similar rhythmic tempos. Identifying a shared neural “sweet spot” ...
Forward-looking: Nvidia's latest push into neural rendering is not just unfolding on keynote stages, but also in follow-up technical briefings. A recent video released days after the DLSS 5 ...
Humans are creatures of rhythms. As far as we know, humans have always sung and always danced. We can recognize a song by its rhythm alone, regardless of whether it is played fast or slow. We seem to ...
We tend to think of music as completely cultural — something we learn to love and understand through lullabies, radio hits, and Spotify playlists. But new research suggests that at least one part of ...
Abstract: Humans spontaneously synchronize movements to a perceived underlying pulse, or beat, in music. Beat perception may be indexed by the synchronization of neural oscillations to the beat, ...