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AAPL
$289.09
▲ 2.61%
MSFT
$372.84
▲ 1.16%
GOOGL
$357.08
▲ 0.97%
AMZN
$238.25
▼ 0.79%
TSLA
$420.32
▲ 2.06%
META
$563.10
▲ 0.09%
NVDA
$199.77
▲ 2.46%
JPM
$327.23
▼ 0.66%
The Guardian Culture
Listeners in the 17th and 18th centuries experienced music in a startlingly vivid – and physical – way. A fascinating academic project is wondering if we should let ourselves be much more moved, and get moving. Plus: a prime minister’s musical legacy?Professor Bettina Varwig wants to get us moving – and feeling, and listening, but primarily moving. The University of Cambridge academic says classical audiences today are “asked to leave our breathing, pulsing, feeling bodies at the door”. In conce
entertainment  6d ago
Science Daily
Scientists have discovered a tiny group of neurons in an ancient brain region that acts like a built-in focus filter, helping the brain ignore distractions and zero in on what matters most. When researchers temporarily switched off these neurons in mice, the animals became unusually distractible—similar to what is seen in ADHD—but regained normal focus as soon as the neurons were reactivated.
science  6d ago

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