Category Archives: Neuroscience

Cognitive Assessment & Training Market Growth Prospect: is the tide Turning – Chronicles 99

A New Syndicate Global Cognitive Assessment & Training Market Study is added in HTF MI database compiled covering key business segments and wider geographical scope to get deep dive analysed market data. The study brings a perfect bridging between qualitative and statistical data ofCognitive Assessment & Training market. The study provides historical data (i.e. Consumption** & Value) from 2014 to 2018 and forecasted till 2026*. Some are the key & emerging players that are part of coverage and have being profiled are Neurotrack, Cogniciti, Intendu, Halo Neuroscience, Cognetivity, Brightlamp, Edsix Brain Lab, BrainCheck & InteraXon.

Know how you are perceived in comparison to your competitors like Neurotrack, Cogniciti, Intendu, Halo Neuroscience, Cognetivity, Brightlamp, Edsix Brain Lab, BrainCheck & InteraXon; Get an accurate view of your business in Global Cognitive Assessment & Training Marketplace. Click to getGlobal Cognitive Assessment & Training Market Research Sample PDF Copy Instantly

Market Dynamics:

Set of qualitative information that includes PESTEL Analysis, PORTER Five Forces Model, Value Chain Analysis and Macro Economic factors, Regulatory Framework along with Industry Background and Overview

Key Highlights that HTF MI is bringing with this Study Revenue splits by most promising business segments. [By Type (, Assessment, Training, Industry Segmentation, Healthcare, Education, Enterprise, Sports, Government & Defense, Channel (Direct Sales, Distributor) Segmentation, By Application () and any other business Segment if applicable within scope of report] Gap Analysis by Region. Country Level Break-up to dig out Trends and emerging opportunity available in area of your business interest. % Market Share & Sales Revenue by Key Players & Local Regional Players . Dedicated Section on Market Entropy to gain insights on Players aggressive Strategies to built market [Merger & Acquisition / Recent Funding & Investment and Key Developments] Patent Analysis** No of patents / Trademark approval filed & received in recent years. Competitive Landscape: Listed Players Company profile with SWOT, In-depth Overview, Product/Services Specification, Headquarter, Subsidiaries, Downstream Buyers and Upstream Suppliers.

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Competitive Landscape:

Mergers & Acquisitions, Agreements & Collaborations, New Product Launches, Business overview & detailed matrix of Product for each player listed in the study. Players exclusively profiled are Neurotrack, Cogniciti, Intendu, Halo Neuroscience, Cognetivity, Brightlamp, Edsix Brain Lab, BrainCheck & InteraXon

Most frequently asked question:Why i cant See My company Profiled in the Study?Yes, It might be a possibility that Company you are looking for is not listed, however study is based on vast coverage of players operating inbut due to limited scope and pricing constraints we can only list few random companies keeping a mix of leaders and emerging players. Do contact us if you wish to see any specific company of your interest in the survey. Currently list of companies available in the study are Neurotrack, Cogniciti, Intendu, Halo Neuroscience, Cognetivity, Brightlamp, Edsix Brain Lab, BrainCheck & InteraXon

Segment & Regional Analysis: What Market breakdown Would be Covered by geographies, Type & Application/End-users Cognitive Assessment & Training Market Revenue & Growth Rate by Type [, Assessment, Training, Industry Segmentation, Healthcare, Education, Enterprise, Sports, Government & Defense, Channel (Direct Sales, Distributor) Segmentation, Section 11: 200 USD??Cost Structure & Section 12: 500 USD??Conclusion] (Historical & Forecast) Global Cognitive Assessment & Training Market Revenue & Growth Rate by Application [] (Historical & Forecast) Cognitive Assessment & Training Market Revenue & Growth Rate by Each Region Specified (Historical & Forecast) Cognitive Assessment & Training Market Volume & Growth Rate by Each Region Specified, Application & Type (Historical & Forecast) Cognitive Assessment & Training Market Revenue, Volume & Y-O-Y Growth Rate by Players (Base Year)

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To comprehend Global Cognitive Assessment & Training market dynamics in the world mainly, the worldwide Cognitive Assessment & Training market is analyzed across major global regions. HTF also provides customized regional and country-level reports

North America: United States, Canada, and Mexico. South & Central America: Argentina, Chile, Colombia and Brazil. Middle East & Africa: Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Israel, Turkey, Egypt, Tunisia and South Africa. Europe: United Kingdom, France, Poland, Italy, Germany, Spain, NORDIC {Sweden, Norway, Finland, Denmark etc}, BENELUX {Belgium, The Netherlands, Luxembourg },and Russia. Asia-Pacific: SAARC Nations, China, Japan, South Korea, Southeast Asia, New Zealand & Australia.

Actual Numbers & In-Depth Analysis with emerging trends of Cognitive Assessment & Training Market Size Estimation Available in Full Copy of Report.

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Thanks for reading this article, you can also get individual chapter or section or regional study by limiting the scope to just G7 or G20 or European Union Countries, Eastern Europe, East Asia or Southeast Asia.

About Author:HTF Market Report is a wholly owned brand of HTF market Intelligence Consulting Private Limited. HTF Market Report global research and market intelligence consulting organization is uniquely positioned to not only identify growth opportunities but to also empower and inspire you to create visionary growth strategies for futures, enabled by our extraordinary depth and breadth of thought leadership, research, tools, events and experience that assist you for making goals into a reality. Our understanding of the interplay between industry convergence, Mega Trends, technologies and market trends provides our clients with new business models and expansion opportunities. We are focused on identifying the Accurate Forecast in every industry we cover so our clients can reap the benefits of being early market entrants and can accomplish their Goals & Objectives.

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Cognitive Assessment & Training Market Growth Prospect: is the tide Turning - Chronicles 99

Jeremy Shaw explores neuroscience and science fiction in new installation – FACT

Phase Shifting Index is presented as part of the Mutations/Creations series at Center Pompidou.

Berlin-based artist Jeremy Shaw will debut a new solo work at Pariss Center Pompidou this month.

Phase Shifting Index arrives as part of the museums Mutations/Creations program, which previously has seen artists Ross Lovegrove, Ryoji Ikeda and Erika Verzutti showing work that exists at the border of art, science and engineering.

Drawing on Shaws enduring interest in ritual, dance, alternative culture, science-fiction and neuroscience, Phase Shifting Index is a new immersive installation that is a continuation on the themes of his recently completed Quantification Trilogy. Watch Jeremy Shaw talking about one of the films from that trilogy, Liminals, below.

Phase Shifting Index runs from February 26 to April 20 at Gallery 3, Centre Pompidou. Tickets are available now.

Watch next: CTM 2020 in videos Robert Henke, Teto Preto, Kamaal Williams and more

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Jeremy Shaw explores neuroscience and science fiction in new installation - FACT

Out of the Basement: Early Results Promising for Portable MRI – MedPage Today

LOS ANGELES -- An investigational low-power MRI scanner appeared safe and feasible for use at the bedside in a standard neuroscience ICU, researchers reported.

The 64-mT portable machine under development by Hyperfine Research required no shielding, no special power supply, no changes to the equipment used in the patient's room, and no precautions for ferrous metal, Bradley Cahn, BS, of Yale University School of Medicine in New Haven, Connecticut, and colleagues reported here at the International Stroke Conference.

Among 96 stroke patients scanned non-acutely (minimum 9 hours post-onset, mean 87 hours), there were no "significant" adverse events. Overall, 87% of participants completed the full exam: six participants experienced claustrophobia, and five didn't fit head and shoulders comfortably into the 30-cm opening.

Acquisition times were about 7.5 minutes for T2-weighted scans, 9.5 for FLAIR, 9.8 for diffusion-weighted imaging, and just shy of 29 minutes for a full exam.

Portable CT machines are already in clinical use for stroke, notably in mobile stroke units, noted Ralph Sacco, MD, chairman of neurology at the University of Miami and past president of the American Heart Association.

"If we could get MRI as quickly as CT scanning, some of us would prefer MRI over CT," he said in an interview.

MRI is a more sensitive indicator of brain injury and can pick up ischemia much earlier in the process when CT might still give a false negative, he noted.

The bulky machines needed to generate high-powered 3- and even 7-T MRI, risk posed by stray metal, as well as the wait and acquisition times have been hurdles, though, Sacco added.

"We have this incredibly safe technology, MRI, and we've put it in depths of the hospital's basement where you have to travel with the patient to get to it," said Cahn. "We've flipped that and brought the magnet into the patient's room."

There are plenty of other possible useful applications, though, said Cahn. Availability in the emergency room and ambulance "would be huge."

However, 28 minutes -- while fast for MRI -- might be just too long to consider overthrowing CT as the standard for urgent diagnosis in most circumstances, said ISC session moderator Justin Fraser, MD, of the University of Kentucky in Lexington. But it could be particularly useful for posterior circulation strokes, to determine futility of thrombectomy, he suggested.

The device still needs to be tested in the acute setting, though, Cahn noted.

"I think what they intended to prove, they proved that it was both feasible and safe to do in this limited, single-center population," commented Peter Panagos, MD, of Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, and American Heart Association/American Stroke Association Stroke Council Chair.

The study included both intubated and non-intubated adults in the neuroscience ICU who needed imaging as standard of care. Those with contraindications to 1.5-T MRI were excluded.

In theory, the device should be compatible with MR-compatible pacemakers and similar devices, but that hasn't been tested yet either, noted Cahn. "We just don't know how the low field strength interacts with devices like that. For example, some devices [that] are safe at 3 T may not be at 7 T and vice versa."

Nor were any scans done with contrast administration. Those studies will come, Cahn said, and the device continues to be iteratively improved.

Disclosures

The trial was supported by Hyperfine Research, which is developing the device, and by the American Heart Association.

Cahn disclosed receiving grants from Hyperfine Research.

Coauthors included some employees of Hyperfine Research.

Panagos and Fraser disclosed no relevant relationships with industry.

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Out of the Basement: Early Results Promising for Portable MRI - MedPage Today

The Neuroscience Behind Kejriwals Victory – The Wire

Arvind Kejriwals victory is currently being viewed from the perspective of a development centred narrative coupled with a platitude of freebies offered by the Aam Admi Party (AAP). However, if one analyses past election results, voters have rejected pro-development governments on a number of occasions.

The governments of Narasimha Rao, as well as Vajpayee, were decisively rejected by the voters, despite their strong development-centric approaches. Freebies have been also rejected by voters rejection of Congress Nyay scheme during the 2019 elections is a glaring example. What then makes Kejriwal so special that both factors which have pushed many governments into oblivion worked in favour of AAP?

The answer to these questions lies in Neuroscience. We have all read about Pavlovs work on conditioned reflexes based on experiments, where an animal was given food and a bell was rung. After a while, the animal started feeling hungry and began to salivate when the bell was rung. This is also called classical conditioning where, a conditioned stimulus e.g. the sound of a bell, is paired with unconditioned stimulus e.g. food which evokes salivation which is an unconditioned response requiring no training.

After the pairing is repeated, the animal demonstrates a conditioned (or doctored) response to the conditioned stimulus or the external agent. The key observation is that repeated enforcement of a given pattern at the mental level, can actuate specific action patterns. This is exactly, what Kejriwal has done.

Also read: AAP: Soft Hindutva or a Bulwark Without Illusions?

He did not offer a one-time waiver of loans to people, as many other governments have done, as people are not only likely to forget it with time but their aspirations also rise, leading to an increase in anti-incumbency. Kejriwal partially waived off electricity and water bills, which impacted the public periodically while entrenching his image as a family caretaker.

Kejriwal identified two other areas, from which a conditioned response could be evoked within a definite timeframe education and health. He knew that improving the quality of education in government schools was extremely difficult to achieve in the short run, so he focused mainly on building classrooms in schools. Most people tend to cross a site near a school on a daily basis.

The emergence of huge buildings can convince people into believing that the quality of education is changing for the better. It affects parents, wards and the general public on a daily basis. Kejriwal also directed the remaining efforts towards the health sector. He set up Mohalla clinics, which may not offer quality health services, but the thought of someone in ones neighbourhood, to attend to them during distress can be a great mental stimulus for the voters.

Voters queue at a polling booth for the New Delhi assembly election in the Indian capital on February 8, 2020. Photo: Reuters

Kejriwal has always believed in making immediate and short term impact with minimal efforts. His odd-even scheme to control rising air pollution in the city was mostly hype and little substance, but people did talk about it while enhancing his pro-development image. His more recent efforts towards making bus transportation free for women also fall along this direction.

The voters of Delhi have failed to realise that Kejriwals investment in infrastructure-based projects, something which was radically done by the Sheila Dikshit government, has drastically fallen behind. For example, capital expenditure, which is associated with investments in infrastructure, has fallen to 0.54% of GSDP in 2018-19 from 1.16% in 2011-12. Declining tax revenues, which have dropped from 5.49% of GSDP in 2015-16 to 4.93% in 2018-19, are a cause of concern. But then, people tend to get swayed by actions having an immediate impact and this is one of the key pitfalls of democratic process.

Also read: AAP Has Successfully Forged a Model for Regional Forces to Emulate

The BJP government had sufficient time towards initiating a set of efforts directed towards creating a specific pro-development image and associated cognitive states in Delhi. For example, they could have set up dozens of central universities, hospitals and schools for residents, which could have had a cascading effect on peoples psyche.

Instead, the BJP chose to focus on things, which had absolutely very little cognitive value. Sentiment driven elements can also have strong cognitive values, but only when other narratives are absent. A typical middle-class family in Delhi cares little about Article 370, CAA and the Ram Temple. The BJPs rise in vote share is mostly driven by the disenchantment of a class which is fed up with schemes which benefit people and who do not pay direct taxes. It does not imply support for BJPs particular strategies, which would actually have minimal effect in their mental day to day lives.

In the context of Modis return to power, his schemes focusing on the construction of toilets, electricity connection and gas supplies in the rural sector also had a very strong cognitive value. The Balakot strikes galvanised his image as a strong leader, who could take decisive decisions. But in recent times, the impact of these narratives is slowly fading and people need newer and stronger initiatives which could excite favourable cognitive patterns. That has been one of the key reasons behind the BJPs dismal performance in key state elections.

There are significant barriers when it comes to replicating Kejriwals model at the national level. Offering free transport or waiving off electricity bills on a large scale is not economically feasible. Hence, AAP may find it difficult to leverage these successes on a pan India level, as his actions have localised cognitive values, confined to Delhi.

Also read: With Another Win in Delhi, Is Arvind Kejriwal Moving to the National Pulpit?

However, AAP does pose a significant threat as other governments may misread his adventurism in the field of freebies and can create a catastrophic burden on the taxpayer. Despite all these, he has sent a strong lesson to other governments that by focusing on health, education and basic necessities, voters thoughts can be significantly swayed in a specific direction, cutting across caste and religious lines, which carries some hope for the future.

Kejriwal has conditioned the psyche of Delhi in a manner that residents tend to strongly associate water, electricity, transportation, school and healthcare with him, which accounts for his grandiose victory in the heart of Hindi heartland.

Dhiraj Sinha holds a doctorate from the University of Cambridge. He has authored several research papers in the field of systems driven far away from equilibrium.

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The Neuroscience Behind Kejriwals Victory - The Wire

Scientists turn organs transparent and capture 3D pictures of what’s inside – STAT

Scientists in Germany have turned human organs transparent and captured pictures of the complex cellular architecture inside, the latest advance in an effort to develop a new way to see inside our tissues.

The new work involved a three-pronged approach: stripping the pigment and fats from organs; capturing images of entire organs with a specially designed, larger microscope; and developing an algorithms to analyze those images and spit out maps labeled with specific cellular structures.

But outside experts said the technique described in a paper published this month in Cell will need more polishing before it might be ready for prime time as a new imaging method.

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The paper delivers impressive proof-of-concept demonstrations [but] it still seems like early days for broader use of the tool, said Katrin Amunts, a neuroscientist and director of the Institute for Neuroscience and Medicine at Forschungszentrum Juelich in Germany, who wasnt involved in the research.

Currently, scientists can study organs in living individuals with the help of imaging tools such as MRI and CT scans. They can also study slices of tissue from organs obtained postmortem and, with the help of new technologies, piece pictures of those slices together into 3D images of an organs structures.

But Ali Ertrk, director of the Institute of Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine at Ludwig Maximilians University of Munich and senior author of the new study, is hopeful that his new approach could one day offer a new way to study organs in even closer detail.

With our technology, we can see every single cell in an entire human organ, said Ertrk.

Ertrk and his colleagues started their work by hunting for chemicals that could clean out the pigments and fats in organs, which block light. Ertrks lab and other groups had been able to clear the color from mouse organs. But the chemicals that worked in mice didnt work for human tissue, which grows stiffer as collagen and other molecules accumulate over time.

They eventually pinpointed a detergent dubbed CHAPS, which created tiny holes throughout organs. The scientists could then soak the organs in other solutions that rendered them transparent without damaging the tissue structure.

Its like converting milk into water. It becomes transparent, Ertrk said.

Ertrk and his colleagues partnered with the German-based biotech company Miltenyi Biotec to design a fluorescent microscope big enough to fit an organ-sized tissue sample under the lens. The microscope works on a sample as big as a human kidney, but doesnt work on larger organs, such as the brain, which Ertrk and his colleagues have also been able to turn transparent.

The pictures the microscope captured create another challenge: how to process and analyze the massive amount of data generated by imaging human tissue at the cellular level.

Ertrk and his team collaborated with researchers at Technical University of Munich to develop algorithms that could analyze the structure of the organs, including the blood vessels and individual cells. The algorithm was roughly as accurate at labeling cell types as a human identifying the structures manually.

Its a task that would take 100 years by hand, and now takes hours, he said.

Taken together, the approach to clearing and imaging intact organs is called SHANEL. The technology is still in the early stages. Etrk and his colleagues are working to develop a larger microscope that can image larger organs. They are also continuing to sharpen the artificial intelligence arm of SHANEL, developing new algorithms for each internal structure they want to identify, whether thats a neuron or a glial cell in the brain.

Amunts, the Forschungszentrum Juelich neuroscientist, said scientists need to carefully study how the process of chemically clearing an organ might affect specific types of tissue, particularly in different regions of the brain. The brains regions vary more widely than tissues in other organs, like the kidney. Theres also a need for more research into the accuracy of clearing approaches and how they stack up to standard organ imaging methods, like looking at 3D images of brain slices.

It remains to be demonstrated that the tissue-clearing approach presented in the paper reaches the same precision, reliability, and reproducibility that established [methods] have, she said.

Ertrk is hopeful that SHANEL can be used in the future to generate 3D maps of human organs that offer new insight into their function, structure, and the role they play in disease. That could be a helpful tool in studying complex organs, such as the brain, experts said.

For basic science studies on the brains structure, I think this can become a very valuable complementary method in the toolset of neuroscientists, Amunts said.

In the long run, Ertrk wants to use those maps to 3D print organs that accurately replicate their natural counterparts, down to the cellular level. Doing so, in theory, could mean creating lab-grown organs that function and potentially, could one day be used for transplants, though theres far more research to be done before that becomes a possibility, Ertrk said.

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Scientists turn organs transparent and capture 3D pictures of what's inside - STAT

She overcame 6 brain surgeries and exchanged her hospital gown for scrubs: ‘It’s my destiny’ – wtvr.com

RICHMOND, Va. During her childhood, Alexa Nixon was more familiar with surgeons than swing sets and spent more time in the pediatric unit than the playground.

I was filled with hope, but I dont look hopeful, said Alexa.

When she was 11, she was wracked by seizures. An MRI revealed a brain tumor the size of a ping pong ball. She had her first surgery in 2005. It would be the first of six brain surgeries.

Waking up out of surgery I couldnt move my left side at all, Alexa recalled. It was also told to me that the likelihood of me walking was small if not none. Then in 2012, I got to the point where I was having on average 10 to 12 seizures a day.

During her long recovery, caregivers left a deep impression on Alexa.

I was very intrigued, and I asked a lot of questions to the nurses that took care of me because I realized this is something, I might want to do one day, she said.

So, Alexa set a goal.

When we first met Alexa in 2016, she was working toward her degree in nursing. You would understand if Alexa wanted nothing to do with hospitals. Today, it's where the 26-year-old feels most comfortable.

I know where I am is where Im supposed to be, said Alexa.

Alexa works in the Acute Neuroscience Unit at VCU Medical Center as a nurse. It is the same unit where she spent so much time as a child.

Its my destiny. And every day I get to live out my destiny, said Alexa.

Alexa sees herself in the faces of the patients she cares for.

Sometimes it hits too close to home, but it makes me that much more driven, said Alexa.

She credits her faith, family and friends with helping her recover and reach her goal.

Every morning when I come to work, I know Im coming to work to do Gods work, she said.

Fellow nurses Jillian Phillips and Morgan Knowles say their colleague possesses intangibles you just can't learn in a classroom.

Oh, Definitely. Yeah. She was definitely made to be a nurse and be there for other people, said Morgan.

She is what you would imagine as the most trusted profession. What people look to as a nurse that is Alexa, added Jillian.

Alexa is setting out on her calling rather than a career.

If in some freak way that Nursing was not a paid profession it would be my hobby, said Alexa.

Alexa Nixon, a one-time patient realizing her dream of helping others all while exchanging her hospital gown for scrubs.

I obviously want to grow as a nurse and in leadership, but I never want to leave the bedside because the patient relationship is why Im here, said Alexa.

Greg McQuade features local heroes in a weekly Heroes Among Us segment. If you would like to nominate someone to be featured on Heroes Among Us, click here to email heroes@wtvr.com.

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She overcame 6 brain surgeries and exchanged her hospital gown for scrubs: 'It's my destiny' - wtvr.com

Recording waves, reading minds – Science Magazine

Our brains, each of which thrums with enough electrical energy to power a low-wattage light bulb, can now be measured and explored much better than ever beforea boon for doctors seeking better medical treatments and a thrill for inventors crossing neuroscience thresholds, but a warning, too, as our personalities and thoughts become less private and potentially more exploitable. In Electric Brain, R. Douglas Fields details scientists' quest to understand brain waves throughout history, covering a good deal of unsettling material in the process and touching on today's emerging technology and most pressing ethical questions.

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Recording waves, reading minds - Science Magazine

Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Market Latest Trends, Business Strategies, Regional Demand, Key Insights and Future Outlook by 2023 – Jewish Life…

In the context of China-US trade war and global economic volatility and uncertainty, it will have a big influence on this market. Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Report by Material, Application, and Geography Global Forecast to 2023 is a professional and comprehensive research report on the worlds major regional market conditions, focusing on the main regions (North America, Europe and Asia-Pacific) and the main countries (United States, Germany, United Kingdom, Japan, South Korea and China).

In this report, the global Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays market is valued at USD XX million in 2020 and is projected to reach USD XX million by the end of 2024, growing at a CAGR of XX% during the period 2020 to 2024.

The report firstly introduced the Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays basics: definitions, classifications, applications and market overview; product specifications; manufacturing processes; cost structures, raw materials and so on. Then it analyzed the worlds main region market conditions, including the product price, profit, capacity, production, supply, demand and market growth rate and forecast etc. In the end, the report introduced new project SWOT analysis, investment feasibility analysis, and investment return analysis.

The major players profiled in this report include:AbcamBio-Rad LaboratoriesCell Signaling TechnologyRocheMerck KGaATecan GroupThermo Fisher Scientific

The end users/applications and product categories analysis:On the basis of product, this report displays the sales volume, revenue (Million USD), product price, market share and growth rate of each type, primarily split into-General Type

On the basis on the end users/applications, this report focuses on the status and outlook for major applications/end users, sales volume, market share and growth rate of Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays for each application, including-Medical

Table of Contents

Part I Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Industry Overview

Chapter One Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Industry Overview1.1 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Definition1.2 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Classification Analysis1.2.1 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Main Classification Analysis1.2.2 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Main Classification Share Analysis1.3 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Application Analysis1.3.1 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Main Application Analysis1.3.2 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Main Application Share Analysis1.4 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Industry Chain Structure Analysis1.5 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Industry Development Overview1.5.1 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Product History Development Overview1.5.1 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Product Market Development Overview1.6 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Global Market Comparison Analysis1.6.1 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Global Import Market Analysis1.6.2 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Global Export Market Analysis1.6.3 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Global Main Region Market Analysis1.6.4 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Global Market Comparison Analysis1.6.5 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Global Market Development Trend Analysis

Chapter Two Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Up and Down Stream Industry Analysis2.1 Upstream Raw Materials Analysis2.1.1 Proportion of Manufacturing Cost2.1.2 Manufacturing Cost Structure of Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Analysis2.2 Down Stream Market Analysis2.2.1 Down Stream Market Analysis2.2.2 Down Stream Demand Analysis2.2.3 Down Stream Market Trend Analysis

Part II Asia Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Industry (The Report Company Including the Below Listed But Not All)

Chapter Three Asia Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Market Analysis3.1 Asia Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Product Development History3.2 Asia Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Competitive Landscape Analysis3.3 Asia Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Market Development Trend

Chapter Four 2015-2020 Asia Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Productions Supply Sales Demand Market Status and Forecast4.1 2015-2020 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Production Overview4.2 2015-2020 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Production Market Share Analysis4.3 2015-2020 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Demand Overview4.4 2015-2020 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Supply Demand and Shortage4.5 2015-2020 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Import Export Consumption4.6 2015-2020 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Cost Price Production Value Gross Margin

Chapter Five Asia Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Key Manufacturers Analysis5.1 Company A5.1.1 Company Profile5.1.2 Product Picture and Specification5.1.3 Product Application Analysis5.1.4 Capacity Production Price Cost Production Value5.1.5 Contact Information5.2 Company B5.2.1 Company Profile5.2.2 Product Picture and Specification5.2.3 Product Application Analysis5.2.4 Capacity Production Price Cost Production Value5.2.5 Contact Information5.3 Company C5.3.1 Company Profile5.3.2 Product Picture and Specification5.3.3 Product Application Analysis5.3.4 Capacity Production Price Cost Production Value5.3.5 Contact Information5.4 Company D5.4.1 Company Profile5.4.2 Product Picture and Specification5.4.3 Product Application Analysis5.4.4 Capacity Production Price Cost Production Value5.4.5 Contact InformationChapter Six Asia Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Industry Development Trend6.1 2020-2024 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Production Overview6.2 2020-2024 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Production Market Share Analysis6.3 2020-2024 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Demand Overview6.4 2020-2024 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Supply Demand and Shortage6.5 2020-2024 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Import Export Consumption6.6 2020-2024 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Cost Price Production Value Gross Margin

Part III North American Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Industry (The Report Company Including the Below Listed But Not All)

Chapter Seven North American Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Market Analysis7.1 North American Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Product Development History7.2 North American Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Competitive Landscape Analysis7.3 North American Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Market Development Trend

Chapter Eight 2015-2020 North American Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Productions Supply Sales Demand Market Status and Forecast8.1 2015-2020 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Production Overview8.2 2015-2020 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Production Market Share Analysis8.3 2015-2020 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Demand Overview8.4 2015-2020 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Supply Demand and Shortage8.5 2015-2020 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Import Export Consumption8.6 2015-2020 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Cost Price Production Value Gross Margin

Chapter Nine North American Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Key Manufacturers Analysis9.1 Company A9.1.1 Company Profile9.1.2 Product Picture and Specification9.1.3 Product Application Analysis9.1.4 Capacity Production Price Cost Production Value9.1.5 Contact Information9.2 Company B9.2.1 Company Profile9.2.2 Product Picture and Specification9.2.3 Product Application Analysis9.2.4 Capacity Production Price Cost Production Value9.2.5 Contact InformationChapter Ten North American Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Industry Development Trend10.1 2020-2024 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Production Overview10.2 2020-2024 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Production Market Share Analysis10.3 2020-2024 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Demand Overview10.4 2020-2024 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Supply Demand and Shortage10.5 2020-2024 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Import Export Consumption10.6 2020-2024 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Cost Price Production Value Gross Margin

Part IV Europe Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Industry Analysis (The Report Company Including the Below Listed But Not All)

Chapter Eleven Europe Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Market Analysis11.1 Europe Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Product Development History11.2 Europe Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Competitive Landscape Analysis11.3 Europe Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Market Development Trend

Chapter Twelve 2015-2020 Europe Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Productions Supply Sales Demand Market Status and Forecast12.1 2015-2020 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Production Overview12.2 2015-2020 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Production Market Share Analysis12.3 2015-2020 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Demand Overview12.4 2015-2020 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Supply Demand and Shortage12.5 2015-2020 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Import Export Consumption12.6 2015-2020 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Cost Price Production Value Gross Margin

Chapter Thirteen Europe Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Key Manufacturers Analysis13.1 Company A13.1.1 Company Profile13.1.2 Product Picture and Specification13.1.3 Product Application Analysis13.1.4 Capacity Production Price Cost Production Value13.1.5 Contact Information13.2 Company B13.2.1 Company Profile13.2.2 Product Picture and Specification13.2.3 Product Application Analysis13.2.4 Capacity Production Price Cost Production Value13.2.5 Contact InformationChapter Fourteen Europe Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Industry Development Trend14.1 2020-2024 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Production Overview14.2 2020-2024 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Production Market Share Analysis14.3 2020-2024 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Demand Overview14.4 2020-2024 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Supply Demand and Shortage14.5 2020-2024 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Import Export Consumption14.6 2020-2024 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Cost Price Production Value Gross Margin

Part V Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Marketing Channels and Investment Feasibility

Chapter Fifteen Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Marketing Channels Development Proposals Analysis15.1 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Marketing Channels Status15.2 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Marketing Channels Characteristic15.3 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Marketing Channels Development Trend15.2 New Firms Enter Market Strategy15.3 New Project Investment Proposals

Chapter Sixteen Development Environmental Analysis16.1 China Macroeconomic Environment Analysis16.2 European Economic Environmental Analysis16.3 United States Economic Environmental Analysis16.4 Japan Economic Environmental Analysis16.5 Global Economic Environmental Analysis

Chapter Seventeen Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays New Project Investment Feasibility Analysis17.1 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Market Analysis17.2 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Project SWOT Analysis17.3 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays New Project Investment Feasibility Analysis

Part VI Global Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Industry Conclusions

Chapter Eighteen 2015-2020 Global Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Productions Supply Sales Demand Market Status and Forecast18.1 2015-2020 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Production Overview18.2 2015-2020 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Production Market Share Analysis18.3 2015-2020 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Demand Overview18.4 2015-2020 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Supply Demand and Shortage18.5 2015-2020 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Import Export Consumption18.6 2015-2020 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Cost Price Production Value Gross Margin

Chapter Nineteen Global Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Industry Development Trend19.1 2020-2024 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Production Overview19.2 2020-2024 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Production Market Share Analysis19.3 2020-2024 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Demand Overview19.4 2020-2024 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Supply Demand and Shortage19.5 2020-2024 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Import Export Consumption19.6 2020-2024 Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Cost Price Production Value Gross Margin

Chapter Twenty Global Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Industry Research Conclusions

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Neuroscience Antibodies and Assays Market Latest Trends, Business Strategies, Regional Demand, Key Insights and Future Outlook by 2023 - Jewish Life...

Hanover author urges us to give our brains a workout – Valley News

Think your brain is destined to shrivel bit by bit as the years go by?

Think again, says John Randolph.

In his new book, The Brain Health Book, the Hanover neuropsychologist presents a sunny view of gray matter, making the case that our brains are not only able to withstand the forces of aging but capable of regeneration and even growth later in life.

We really do have a fair amount of control over our brain health, Randolph said in a recent telephone interview. What the science says is that the things that matter the most are the lifestyle choices that are free or inexpensive and available to all of us.

These choices range from intuitive techniques such as doing crossword puzzles and sudoku to strategies less obviously connected to cognition, such as exercising, maintaining social connections and even defining your core values. Randolph, who conducts research at the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth College and has his own practice as a brain health coach and consultant in Lebanon, also emphasizes preventive measures including proper nutrition, adequate sleep and stress management.

If such a regimen sounds a bit overwhelming, Randolph recommends tackling the techniques one at a time. Read just a few chapters and let those chapters simmer a bit, he said. Its important to be realistic. Making even a 10-15% change in one area of your life can make a huge difference.

The book offers a laypersons look at some of the latest research in neuroscience, along with checklists, quizzes and stories from Randolphs practice, where he treats people with cognitive challenges as well as those who are simply interested in improving and preserving their cognitive skills.

Randolph, who is scheduled to discuss his book at the Norwich Bookstore on Wednesday, believes that latter group is beginning to grow.

Its sort of like investing, he said. I think the wave of the future is to be thinking about how our brains are functioning right now and how that plots onto our future even decades down the road.

For that reason, the book may be most relevant not to people in their 70s and 80s although its never too late to think about brain health but to those in their 40s, 50s and 60s. Many of the studies presented in the book demonstrate how lifestyle factors in middle age affect brain function in the later years.

For example, one evidence-based study showed that women who were the most physically fit in middle age were 88% less likely to develop Alzheimers disease or other forms of dementia than women who were moderately fit.

The importance of exercise in maintaining brain health really cannot be overemphasized, Randolph writes. It reduces inflammation, which has been linked to Alzheimers; lowers stress, which affects a variety of cognitive functions; boosts neurochemicals that help us focus, learn and remember new things; and even promotes growth in the hippocampus and frontal cortex.

There is simply no better intervention to date that impacts the brain so profoundly and completely as exercise, he writes.

The book also shows how social connections are closely linked to brain health. The amount of time we spend socializing, the size of our social networks and the degree of support we feel in those networks all play a role in cognition as we age. Conversely, negative relationships and isolation hurt the brain. Studies found that cognitive skills declined 20% faster among people who described themselves as lonely and that particularly isolated people have a 60% higher risk of cognitive decline than people with a large social network.

The book also demonstrates how stimulating mental activities such as playing games, reading and playing instruments improve brain health. One particularly compelling study examined sets of twins in which one played a musical instrument and one didnt. The twins who played instruments were 64% less likely to develop dementia than those who didnt.

Randolph, who moved to the Upper Valley from the West Coast 18 years ago to complete clinical and research fellowships in neuropsychology and neuroimaging at Dartmouth, has applied much of the research to his own life. He tries to eat a mostly Mediterranean-style diet high in whole grains, fish, fruit, vegetables and legumes and stays active by running, playing racquetball, snowboarding, skiing and kayaking. At 48, hes in the prime age bracket to invest in his brain health.

And those investments arent limited to physical concerns like exercise and diet. Randolph also makes the case that our outlook and values have a profound effect on our brains, clearing out mental clutter and sharpening our focus on what matters.

When we have a stronger purpose in life, when we have a good sense of what drives us day to day, that improves how the brain works, he said. Gratitude would be another example. When people engage in gratitude exercises on a regular basis, their brain health tends to be stronger.

John Randolph will be at the Norwich Bookstore on Wednesday at 7 p.m. For information or to save a seat, call 802-649-1114 or email info@norwichbookstore.com.

Sarah Earle can be reached at searle@vnews.com or 603-727-3268.

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Hanover author urges us to give our brains a workout - Valley News

Brain and Brawn: Hitting the Gym Slows Neurodegeneration in Older People At Risk of Alzheimer’s – Technology Networks

For the first time, an intervention - lifting weights - has been able to slow and even halt degeneration, over a long period, in brain areas particularly vulnerable to Alzheimer's disease.

Researchers have found that six months of strength training (lifting weights) can help protect brain areas especially vulnerable to Alzheimers disease up to one year later.

The team, led by researchers at the University of Sydney, conducted a clinical trial for older people at high risk of Alzheimers disease due to mild cognitive impairment.

Mild cognitive impairment involves a decline in memory and other thinking skills despite generally intact daily living skills, and is one of strongest risk factors for dementia. People with mild cognitive impairment are at a one-in-10 risk of developing dementia within a year.

Study participants were randomly allocated to do computerised brain training, strength training, combined computer and strength training, which they did for just six months followed by their usual activity for 12 months.

The long-term study found that strength training led to overall benefits to cognitive performance, benefits linked to protection from degeneration in specific subregions of the hippocampus. The hippocampus is a complex structure in the brain with a major role in learning and memory.

The hippocampus subregions targeted by the strength training were those especially vulnerable to Alzheimers disease. In the control condition, where no strength training was undertaken hippocampal subregions shrunk by 3-4 percent over the 18-months, whilst those undergoing strength training saw only 1-2 percent reductions, and in some areas, none at all.

The findings have been published this month in the specialist journal Neuroimage: Clinical.

Strength training is a type of physical exercise that requires repetitive contraction of the major muscle groups against an opposing force, typically a free weight or using gym equipment. Participants in this study did supervised strength training for just 90 minutes in total each week, over two or three weekly sessions.

Dr Kathryn Broadhouse, now with the University of the Sunshine Coast, who led the analysis while at the University of Sydney, said the data showed that strength training could exert important biological effects.

Our research shows that strength training can protect some hippocampal subregions from degeneration or shrinkage for up to 12-months after the training has stopped, Dr Broadhouse said.

To arrive at their conclusions, the team conducted MRI brain scans of the participants three times over an 18-month period and used some of the latest advances in image analysis to quantify changes to subregions within the hippocampus, the brains memory hub.

Hippocampal segmentation is difficult because the borders between structures are sometimes unclear and even anatomists will debate where to draw the line, so we restricted our analysis to those subregions where the data is consistent, Dr Broadhouse said.

Professor Michael Valenzuela, leader of the Regenerative Neuroscience Group at the University of Sydneys Brain and Mind Centre and the senior author of the study, believes the finding should change the dementia prevention message.

This is the first time any intervention, medical or lifestyle, has been able to slow and even halt degeneration in brain areas particularly vulnerable to Alzheimers disease over such a long time, said Professor Valenzuela, from the Sydney Medical School in the Faculty of Medicine and Health.

Given this was also linked to protection from cognitive decline, the message is clear: resistance exercise needs to become a standard part of dementia risk-reduction strategies, he said.

Professor Valenzuela is one of the leaders of the multi-million-dollar Australian Maintain your Brain online trial (www.maintainyourbrain.org) that will test if a tailored program of lifestyle modification, including resistance exercise, can prevent cognitive loss in a group of 6,000+ older adults.

Reference: Broadhouse, K. M., Singh, M. F., Suo, C., Gates, N., Wen, W., Brodaty, H., Jain, N., Wilson, G. C., Meiklejohn, J., Singh, N., Baune, B. T., Baker, M., Foroughi, N., Wang, Y., Kochan, N., Ashton, K., Brown, M., Li, Z., Mavros, Y., Valenzuela, M. J. (2020). Hippocampal plasticity underpins long-term cognitive gains from resistance exercise in MCI. NeuroImage: Clinical, 25, 102182. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2020.102182

This article has been republished from the following materials. Note: material may have been edited for length and content. For further information, please contact the cited source.

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Brain and Brawn: Hitting the Gym Slows Neurodegeneration in Older People At Risk of Alzheimer's - Technology Networks