Author name: CNSfoundation

brain’s outer layer

Head injuries can make children loners Thursday, April 10, 2014  ·  Posted by Brigham Young University This is a preliminary study but we want to go into more of the details about why working memory and processing speed are associated with social functioning and how specific brain structures might be related to improve outcome.

Study confirms mitochondrial deficits in children with autism

Thursday, May 8, 2014  ·  Posted by University of California – Davis Health System Children with autism experience deficits in a type of immune cell that protects the body from infection. Children with autism experience deficits in a type of immune cell that protects the body from infection. Called granulocytes, the cells exhibit one-third the capacity to …

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Posts with Tag “IMBC”

Monday, November 10, 2014  ·  Posted by Sara Faye Richmond Palmer Clay Richmond, Our Inspiration, 9/11/95 – 10/25/14 He was a teacher, a son, a brother, a friend, an inspiration. Whatever he was to you he was special. Our relationship with him will continue as our experiences with him push us all to love deeper, to work …

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About

Mission History Leadership Alex Richmond Executive Director Alex Richmond brings a strong background in political science to his role as Executive Director of CNS Foundation and as an advocate for regenerative medicine focused on pediatric conditions. After graduating from Marymount Manhattan College in 2007, Alex was involved in a Presidential campaign, a LA County City …

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Goodnight. Sleep Clean.

Saturday, January 11, 2014  ·  Posted by Maria Konnikova, New York Times Sleep seems like a perfectly fine waste of time. Why would our bodies evolve to spend close to one-third of our lives completely out of it, when we could instead be doing something useful or exciting? Image by Eiko Ojala, courtesy of the New York …

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Get Involved

Join Our Community Upcoming Events Fundraise Volunteer/Intern Newsletter Archive Help CNS Foundation By Making a Tax-Deductable Donation Consider making CNS Foundation an integral part of your charitable giving this year.  Funds raised through CNS Foundation will support research, outreach education, and the advancement of clinical applications and therapies.  With your help we will engage more …

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long-term degenerative processes

Penn Researchers Model a Key Breaking Point Involved in Traumatic Brain Injury Wednesday, March 5, 2014  ·  Posted by The University of Pennsylvania Their recent findings shed new light on the mechanical properties of a critical brain protein and its role in the elasticity of axons, the long, tendril-like part of brain cells. This protein, known as …

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swelling

Penn Researchers Model a Key Breaking Point Involved in Traumatic Brain Injury Wednesday, March 5, 2014  ·  Posted by The University of Pennsylvania Their recent findings shed new light on the mechanical properties of a critical brain protein and its role in the elasticity of axons, the long, tendril-like part of brain cells. This protein, known as …

swelling Read More »

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Neuron regeneration may help sufferers of brain injury, Alzheimer’s disease

Thursday, December 19, 2013  ·  Posted by Penn State University In vivo reprogramming turns glial cell scar tissue back to normal neuron tissue. Researchers at Penn State have developed an innovative technology to regenerate functional neurons after brain injury and also in model systems used for research on Alzheimer’s disease. The scientists have used supporting cells of …

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