Neuroscience
- 			 Neuroscience NeuroscienceKay Tye improvises to understand our inner livesTo figure out how rich mental lives are created by the brain, neuroscientist Kay Tye applies “a new level of neurobiological sophistication.” 
- 			 Animals AnimalsTo test sleep, researchers don’t let sleeping jellyfish lieUpside-down jellyfish are the first known animals without a brain to enter a sleeplike state. 
- 			 Health & Medicine Health & MedicineFrom day one, a frog’s developing brain is calling the shotsFrog brains help organize muscle and nerve patterns early in development. 
- 			 Neuroscience NeuroscienceGene variant linked to Alzheimer’s disease is a triple threatA genetic risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease works on multiple aspects of the disease, researchers report. 
- 			 Animals AnimalsBat brain signals illuminate navigation in the darkNew lab technologies that let bats fly freely allow scientists to track nerve cell signals as the animals dodge and weave. By Amber Dance
- 			 Animals AnimalsA researcher reveals the shocking truth about electric eelsA biologist records the electrical current traveling through his arm during an electric eel’s defensive leap attack. 
- 			 Neuroscience NeuroscienceBrain chemical lost in Parkinson’s may contribute to its own demiseA dangerous form of the chemical messenger dopamine causes cellular mayhem in the very nerve cells that make it. 
- 			 Science & Society Science & SocietyLearning is a ubiquitous, mysterious phenomenonActing Editor in Chief Elizabeth Quill talks about the science of learning and how our brains process new knowledge. 
- 			 Neuroscience NeuroscienceLearning takes brain acrobaticsBrains that learn best seem able to reconfigure themselves on the fly, a new line of research suggests. 
- 			 Neuroscience NeuroscienceHow an itch hitches a ride to the brainScientists have figured out how your brain registers the sensation of itch. 
- 			 Animals AnimalsReaders fascinated by critters’ strange biologyReaders responded to fish lips, monkey brains, sunless tanner and more. 
- 			 Neuroscience NeuroscienceMice with a mutation linked to autism affect their littermates’ behaviorGenetically normal littermates of mutated mice behave strangely, suggesting that the social environment plays a big role in behavior.