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Your Brain Is Shaped Like Nobody Else’s

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nautil.us

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newsletters@nautil.us

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Thu, Apr 20, 2023 11:06 AM

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Every brain’s white matter is different—and that might hold the key to better treatments.

Every brain’s white matter is different—and that might hold the key to better treatments. Plus: my life with the penguins; immunity is a matter of timing; this week’s Facts So Romantic; and more. [View in browser]( | [Become a member]( Newsletter brought to you by: April 20, 2023   Did a friend forward this? [Subscribe here](. Good Morning! Here’s the latest stories from Nautilus—and this week’s Facts So Romantic below [READ NAUTILUS](   [NEUROSCIENCE]( [Your Brain Is Shaped Like Nobody Else’s]( Every brain’s white matter is different—and that might hold the key to better treatments. BY SOFIA QUAGLIA With a large blade resembling a bread knife—but without the jagged edges—Stephanie Forkel slices through the human brain lying in front of her on the dissection table. [Continue reading →]( Experience the endless possibilities and deep human connections that science offers [SUBSCRIBE TODAY](   [Take Back Control Of Your Health & Start Your Health Journey With Noom]( Modern diets have [derailed our evolution](. [Noom]( can help you get back on track and change your relationship with food in just 10 minutes a day. By examining the "why" behind your choices, their program can help you make better decisions. With daily lessons, guided coaching, and group accountability, you’ll hit your goals and make changes for the long haul. [Take their quiz]( to get started. [Try Noom](   [ZOOLOGY]( [My Life with the Penguins]( How I came to feel at home in what some call the last wilderness on Earth—Antarctica. BY NAIRA DE GRACIA [Continue reading →]( [HEALTH]( [Immunity Is a Matter of Timing]( Vaccines, infections, and diseases can all be influenced by our circadian rhythm. BY DIANA KWON [Continue reading →]( [ENVIRONMENT]( [How Can We Stop the CO2 That Plants Store from Leaking Back Into the Air?]( One question for Eli Yablonovich, an applied physicist at UC Berkeley. BY BRIAN GALLAGHER [Continue reading →]( [PHYSICS]( [The Electron Is So Round That It’s Ruling Out Potential New Particles]( If the electron’s charge wasn’t perfectly round, it could reveal the existence of hidden particles. A new measurement approaches perfection. BY ZACK SAVITSKY [Continue reading →](   [“]()[I have no words to express my feelings after reading this article.]([”]() Nautilus reader Roberta Correia ([@robfcorreia]() reacts to Catherine DeNardo’s article, [“The Story of a Lonely Orca.”](   FACTS SO ROMANTIC The Best Things We Learned Today [IQ and working memory]( are easier to predict from white matter shape than personality or temperament. [Nautilus→](   [Penguins are beefy birds](, sleek bullets of swimming muscle, torpedoes of power, and they slap impressively hard. [Nautilus→](   [A key component of our circadian clock]( can alter the novel coronavirus’ ability to enter and replicate within lung cells. [Nautilus→](   [If an electron were the size of Earth](, physicists could detect a bump on the North Pole the height of a single sugar molecule. [Nautilus→](   [We can remove the old carbon dioxide]( that we put into the atmosphere decades ago. [Nautilus→](   [“I did not miss human companionship—I was happy amid the penguin’s ecstatic energy.”]( [Wildlife technician Naira de Gracia reflects on her time among the animals in Antarctica.](   More in Neuroscience [What Happens to My Brain on the Psychedelic DMT?]( One question for Christopher Timmermann, a cognitive neuroscientist at Imperial College London. BY BRIAN GALLAGHER [Continue reading →]( [Neuroscience Has a Race Problem]( Why Black people are poorly represented in neuroimaging studies—and how science can do better. BY JACKIE ROCHELEAU [Continue reading →](   P.S. Today, April 20, is a holiday for marijuana enthusiasts. With the psychoactive plant becoming more mainstream as a result of increased legalization, more growers are experimenting. Madison Margolin wrote about the new ecology of good weed, highlighting the regenerative methods of Daniel Stein, whose cultivation practices [“go beyond sustainability in that they heal, improve, and remediate.”](   Today’s newsletter was written by Brian Gallagher   CAST YOUR VOTE Cast Your Vote for Nautilus’ “The Great Forgetting” Nautilus was nominated for a [Webby Award]( for Best Writing (Editorial) for paleoclimatologist Summer Praetorius’ article “[The Great Forgetting.](” This profoundly moving piece juxtaposes the arc of the author’s science with her brother’s life, inspiring us to think about climate change in the realm of emotion and reflection. [Please vote]( for us below! [Vote Now](   [Facebook]( [Twitter]( [Instagram]( Copyright © 2023 NautilusNext, All rights reserved. You were subscribed to the newsletter from nautil.us. Our mailing address is: NautilusNext 360 W 36th Street, 7S, New York, NY 10018 Don't want to hear from us anymore? Click here to [unsubscribe](.

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