Latest News for: imaging studies

Edit

Humans are really bad at detecting fake AI images, study shows

PC World 29 Jul 2025
The study collected data from an online “Real or Not ... The study also showed that it’s easier to identify fake images of faces than landscapes, but even then the difference is only by a few percent.
Edit

Dopamine’s stronghold is the striatum, not the cortex, brain imaging study suggests

PsyPost 19 Jul 2025
But many of those studies examined cortical tissue in isolation and used imaging techniques that were adjusted to detect dopamine in that specific area ... The study, “Whole-Brain Confocal Imaging ...
Edit

Biggest human imaging study scans 100,000th person

BBC News 15 Jul 2025
UK Biobank scientists say the human body can be studied in greater detail than ever thanks to people like Steve ... .
Edit

Menstrual cycle hormone levels influence women’s attention to female faces, brain imaging study finds

PsyPost 19 Jun 2025
A new brain imaging study has found that women’s attention and cognitive control can be influenced by hormonal fluctuations across the menstrual cycle ... They were shown images of neutral male and female faces with gender labels superimposed on them.
Edit

New imaging study in Down syndrome reveals eye blood vessel changes linked to early Alzheimer’s (Queen's University Belfast)

Public Technologies 11 Jun 2025
) New imaging study in Down syndrome reveals eye blood vessel changes linked to early Alzheimer's ... New imaging study in Down syndrome reveals eye blood vessel changes linked to early Alzheimer's 11 June, 2025.
Edit

UNM scientists help reveal Yellowstone’s inner workings in breakthrough imaging study (The University of New Mexico)

Public Technologies 28 May 2025
Using cutting-edge seismic imaging, the team identified a sharply defined, gas-rich cap just 3.8 kilometers below the surface-a feature that suggests the reservoir is in active state but not building toward a catastrophic eruption.
Edit

National Cancer Institute’s $4M grant funds prostate cancer imaging study (Cornell University)

Public Technologies 15 May 2025
"We hope to use PSMA-PET CT as a less invasive and less costly alternative to biopsy in men undergoing active surveillance for low- or moderate-risk prostate cancers," said the study's principal investigator Dr.
  • 1
×