Using the technology too much can lead to a new problem called “brain fry,” which Harvard Business Review recently defined as “mental fatigue.” Using AI too much can lead to a new problem called “AI ...
AI causes ‘brain fry’ at work, researchers warn - ‘My thinking wasn’t broken, just noisy – like mental static,’ says one study participant ...
, and there it is again - that fragment of a song, looping endlessly with no off switch in sight. Most people know exactly ...
The study marketing workers reporting the highest rate of brain fry. A study of U.S. workers finds 14% report "brain fry" ...
Until now, conventional 3D cell cultures have often been either too rigid or too unstable to realistically reproduce the ...
The literature and research consistently affirm that self-motivation drives academic, educational, and personal potential.
The increased speed and multitasking that AI allows at work is leading to many workers experiencing "brain fry," a new study found.
How does a single cell reliably build one of the most complex structures known in nature? New research suggests the answer ...
Scientists studying the cellular origins of pineoblastoma discovered a dependency applicable to anatomically distinct brain tumor types, which may be therapeutically targetable. MEMPHIS, Tenn., March ...
The Brain Prize 2026 is awarded to Professors David Ginty (US) and Patrik Ernfors (Sweden) for their pioneering discoveries on how the nervous system detects and processes touch and pain. Their work h ...
The team is led by Leanne Li of The Francis Crick Institute in London, England. Her research combines cancer biology and neuroscience to investigate how cancer communicates with peripheral nerves ...
No one has had a Synchron brain-computer interface longer than Rodney Gorham. He’s still finding new ways to use it.