Technology Quarterly
Neuroscience
Fixing the brain
Technology Quarterly -
The toolkit for tackling brain dysfunction is expanding rapidly, says Natasha Loder
- Fixing the brain: After fallow decades, neuroscience is undergoing a renaissance
- More judgment, less luck: Science needs to move beyond luck if it is to design better drugs for the brain
- Precision neuromedicine: Better brain biology will deliver better medicines
- The new psychedelia: Ketamine, psilocybin and ecstasy are coming to the medicine cabinet
- Getting wired up: Crossing the brain’s electrical frontier
- Mind over matter: What does a brain-computer interface feel like?
- Neuroscience: Sources and acknowledgments
Fixing the brain
After fallow decades, neuroscience is undergoing a renaissance
The toolkit for tackling brain dysfunction is expanding rapidly, says Natasha Loder
More judgment, less luck
Science needs to move beyond luck if it is to design better drugs for the brain
Neuroscience is complex and confusing, but it is no longer Bedlam
Precision neuromedicine
Better brain biology will deliver better medicines
Insights from organoids and optogenetics help
The new psychedelia
Ketamine, psilocybin and ecstasy are coming to the medicine cabinet
From expanding minds to healing brains
Mind over matter
What does a brain-computer interface feel like?
Talking to Philip O’Keefe about the implant in his head
Neuroscience
Sources and acknowledgments
Previous report
The energy transition
Climate technology
Technology Quarterly -
Electrifying everything does not solve the climate crisis, but it is a great start. Vijay Vaitheeswaran reports on what the transition still needs
- The electric endgame for fossil fuels: Electrifying everything does not solve the climate crisis, but it is a great start
- The people’s power: Getting the most out of tomorrow’s grid requires digitisation and demand response
- Beyond batteries: Decarbonisation of electric grids reliant on renewables requires long-duration energy storage
- Low-hanging fruit: New technology can help monitor, manage and minimise methane leaks
- The long goodbye: Making natural gas emissions-free will be a challenge
- Heat, hope and hydrogen: Green gases can help in the shift from fossil fuels to electricity
- Climate technology: Acknowledgments