Saman Arfaie, MD, CM (@saman_arfaie) 's Twitter Profile
Saman Arfaie, MD, CM

@saman_arfaie

🎓@UCBerkeley🩺@McGillMed✍🏻Author @CambridgeUP @umanitobapress 🎹Pianist 🧠Philosophile 🔬@TheNeuro_MNI 💭@TEDx Speaker (x5) 💡Co-Founder @neuro_IC @ca_msign

ID: 883919450147217409

linkhttps://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXu6KPu3FQqazYPmgI0-UZ9soTj1uoYKz&si=e4Q3A0RB--RqCJ66 calendar_today09-07-2017 05:23:14

1,1K Tweet

809 Followers

2,2K Following

@BrainComms (@braincomms) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Hanseeuw and Johnson comment on the work of Kwan et al., discussing how to predict cognitive decline in preclinical #AlzheimersDisease. Check it out here 👉 bit.ly/3n6vett

Josue Regalado (@josueregalado96) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Memories from long ago are thought to exist in a different part of your brain than new memories. 🤔🧠 My work with andrewtoader suggests a new role for the anteromedial (AM) thalamus in selecting & stabilizing memories into long-term storage! 🧵1/7 shorturl.at/wAK26

Memories from long ago are thought to exist in a different part of your brain than new memories. 🤔🧠

My work with <a href="/andrewtoader/">andrewtoader</a> suggests a new role for the anteromedial (AM) thalamus in selecting &amp; stabilizing memories into long-term storage! 🧵1/7 

shorturl.at/wAK26
The Cultural Tutor (@culturaltutor) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Exactly 170 years ago today Vincent van Gogh was born. But he didn't just paint sunflowers and starry skies. Van Gogh made over 2,000 works of art in less than ten years - one every 36 hours. So here are some of his less famous masterpieces:

Exactly 170 years ago today Vincent van Gogh was born.

But he didn't just paint sunflowers and starry skies. Van Gogh made over 2,000 works of art in less than ten years - one every 36 hours.

So here are some of his less famous masterpieces:
Joanes Grandjean wants you to share your data (@grandjeanlab) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Beautiful cover. Time to release some less known trivia about the study. 1. It took 4h to input 209 authors into the editorial system. That is the time it takes to 🚆 from Amsterdam to London. I dreaded desk rejection because I didn't want to go through that ordeal again

Ruben Dario Palacio, Ph.D. (@rdpalacio) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Science is hard. Good research makes you feel stupid. You're inadequate for the task at hand. How else would it be? You're pushing the boundaries of knowledge. Get used to it. This process is immensely rewarding.

Science is hard. 

Good research makes you feel stupid.

You're inadequate for the task at hand. 

How else would it be? You're pushing the boundaries of knowledge. 

Get used to it. This process is immensely rewarding.
Ye Ella Tian (@yetianmed) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Mental illness is a brain disorder? Right? We thought so. Hang on though, our new study JAMA Psychiatry shows that poor body health is a more pronounced manifestation of mental illness than poor brain health. jamanetwork.com/journals/jamap… 🧵1/9

Mental illness is a brain disorder? Right?

We thought so.

Hang on though, our new study <a href="/JAMAPsych/">JAMA Psychiatry</a> shows that poor body health is a more pronounced manifestation of mental illness than poor brain health.

jamanetwork.com/journals/jamap…

🧵1/9
Timothy Woodiwiss (@timwoodiwissmd) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Excited to share a new review on epigenetic regulation in #GBM. Many thanks to my co-author Colin McCornack and for the fantastic mentorship from Albert H. Kim. #neurosurgery University of Iowa Neurosurgery @WashuBTC WashU Med Taylor Family Department of Neurosurgery frontiersin.org/articles/10.33…

Philosophical Psychology (@journalphp) 's Twitter Profile Photo

In our last issue we published a symposium on Joseph LeDoux's (Joseph E. LeDoux "The Four Realms of Existence") The Deep History of Ourselves. The entire symposium is free access right now. Here is a thread on the contents of the symposium to whet your appetite #DeepHistory Routledge Philosophy and Religion Taylor & Francis Research Insights

In our last issue we published a symposium on Joseph LeDoux's (<a href="/theamygdaloid/">Joseph E. LeDoux "The Four Realms of Existence"</a>) The Deep History of Ourselves. The entire symposium is free access right now. Here is a thread on the contents of the symposium to whet your appetite #DeepHistory <a href="/Routledge_Phil/">Routledge Philosophy and Religion</a> <a href="/tandfonline/">Taylor & Francis Research Insights</a>
Pascoal Lab (@labpascoal) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Why many Aβ-positive cognitively unimpaired individuals do not develop downstream tau pathology? Our new study led by Bruna Bellaver published in Nature Medicine shows that looking at reactive astrocytes may help start solving this question. rb.gy/y9qkj

Physics In History (@physinhistory) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Oppenheimer's famous phrase, "Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds," is a reference to a verse from the Hindu scripture Bhagavad Gita. The verse in question is from Chapter 11, Verse 32, in which the deity Krishna reveals his divine form to the warrior Arjuna.

Oppenheimer's famous phrase, "Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds," is a reference to a verse from the Hindu scripture Bhagavad Gita. The verse in question is from Chapter 11, Verse 32, in which the deity Krishna reveals his divine form to the warrior Arjuna.
Veera Rajagopal  (@doctorveera) 's Twitter Profile Photo

A mind-blowing paper has come out today in nature In 2016, JC Venter Institute scientists trimmed a bacterial genome to its barest minimum required for life to synthesize what they called a "minimal genome" (science.org/doi/10.1126/sc…). Today, a group of scientists from

A mind-blowing paper has come out today in <a href="/Nature/">nature</a>  

In 2016, JC Venter Institute scientists trimmed a bacterial genome to its barest minimum required for life to synthesize what they called a "minimal genome" (science.org/doi/10.1126/sc…). 

Today, a group of scientists from
Saman Arfaie, MD, CM (@saman_arfaie) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The places that matter to us are inexhaustible in our minds. They bring us a sense of grounding at the crossroads of their center, knowing that the inspiration &perspiration dedicated to a cause well-lived are directly tied to an enriching life. Western Neurosurgery

The places that matter to us are inexhaustible in our minds. They bring us a sense of grounding at the crossroads of their center, knowing that the inspiration &amp;perspiration dedicated to a cause well-lived are directly tied to an enriching life. <a href="/westernu_nsx/">Western Neurosurgery</a>