A UNSW study found that people with schizophrenia who hear voices react to inner speech as if it were external sound. Using ...
A new study led by psychologists from UNSW Sydney has provided the strongest evidence yet that auditory verbal hallucinations ...
New neuroscience research shows handwriting activates more brain regions than typing, improving memory, learning, and ...
A new study reveals that auditory hallucinations in schizophrenia may arise when the brain fails to recognize its own inner voice as self-generated.
Gear Patrol on MSN
Nike’s New Shoes Look Utterly Bizarre. But What They Do Is Even Wilder
Forget super shoes that make you run faster. Nike's newest footwear innovation might actually change the way you think.
Neurotechnologies encompass a wide range of innovations, including brain-computer interfaces (BCIs), neural implants, ...
ScienceAlert on MSN
50-Year-Old Theory on Schizophrenia's 'Voices' Confirmed by Recent Study
New evidence confirms a long-held theory that people with schizophrenia hear 'voices' in their heads by misattributing inner speech as external.
To meet the growing demands of flexible and wearable electronic systems, such as smart watches and biomedical sensors, ...
When students entered Tsinghua University in Beijing this year, one of the first representatives they met wasn’t a person.
Dr. Alissa Call, associate professor of psychology at Black Hills State University, is shedding light on the role of ...
Discover Magazine on MSN
Hearing Voices and the Inner Monologue Can Get Mixed Up for Those with Schizophrenia
Learn how people with auditory verbal hallucinations respond to their internal voice, interpreting it as external sound.
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