The Picower Institute for Learning and Memory

The Picower Institute for Learning and Memory

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The Picower Institute is an independent research entity within MIT’s School of Science, dedicated to understanding the biology and neuroscience behind learning and memory and related functions such as perception and consciousness. Researchers investigate the basic science of the brain and explore how their findings may produce new treatments and methods of diagnosis. Faculty members hold academic

Symposium speakers examine how understanding the brain could improve the functioning of democracy 06/04/2026

Combining insights from the debates of American civics to the discoveries of neuroscience labs, experts honed in on ways that brain science research could inform efforts to improve political participation and dialogue in a polarized age

Symposium speakers examine how understanding the brain could improve the functioning of democracy Combining insights from the debates of American civics to the discoveries of neuroscience labs, experts honed in on ways that brain science research could inform efforts to improve political participation and dialogue in a polarized age

05/20/2026

Join the next webinar to hear new insights on the unique way somatostatin neurons integrate into cortical circuitry during development and contribute to healthy cortical function.

Register now 🔗: https://vist.ly/53t84

05/18/2026

Congratulations to Professor Emery N. Brown, who this morning received an honorary doctorate of medical sciences Yale University in recognition of his , statistics and anesthesiology research.

The rules neurons follow to make sense of what we see 05/14/2026

The rules neurons follow to make sense of what we see. A new study in mice by the lab of Mriganak Sur discerns the rules that neurons use to turn what could be a cacophony of input into a functional arrangement for processing vision.
News: https://picower.mit.edu/news/rules-neurons-follow-make-sense-what-we-see
Open access study in led by Kyle Jenks: https://www.cell.com/iscience/fulltext/S2589-0042(26)01236-8

The rules neurons follow to make sense of what we see Brain cells take in many signals through thousands of circuit connections. A new study in mice discerns the rules that turn what could be a cacophony of inputs into a functional arrangement for neurons that process vision.

How Does Your Brain Know a Cat Is a Cat? 05/06/2026

Read a fascinating new interview in Nautilus with Earl Miller and Lisa Feldman Barrett based on their new paper in Nature Reviews Neuroscience, "Categorization is 'baked' into the brain."

How Does Your Brain Know a Cat Is a Cat? How Does Your Brain Know a Cat Is a Cat?: A conversation with renowned neuroscientists Lisa Feldman Barrett and Earl Miller about categories, “folk psychology,” beginner’s mind, and thinking fast and slow

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