• About Us
    • Overview
    • Education
    • Mission & History
    • Board of Directors
    • The Campus
    • Careers
  • Our Achievements
    • Overview
    • Cancer
    • Technology
    • Education
    • Our Planet
    • Health & Medicine
    • Physical World
  • Get Involved
    • Overview
    • Partners in Science
    • Estate & Planned Giving
    • Attend an Event
    • Gift Opportunities
  • News & Media
    • Overview
    • News & Media Archive
    • Coronavirus
    • Feature Stories
    • News Releases
    • In The News
    • Video Gallery
    • Ad Campaigns
    • Celebrating Great Minds
  • Blog
  • Contact
  • Donate
Donate
Donate
About Us tri
About Us Overview
  • Education
  • Mission & History
  • Board of Directors
  • The Campus
  • Careers
About Us

Founded in 1944, the American Committee for the Weizmann Institute of Science develops philanthropic support for the Weizmann Institute in Israel, and advances its mission of science for the benefit of humanity.

Our Achievements tri
Our Achievements Overview
  • Cancer
  • Technology
  • Education
  • Our Planet
  • Health & Medicine
  • Physical World
Our Achievements

The Weizmann Institute’s fundamental research has led to discoveries and applications with a major impact on the scientific community and on the quality of life for millions worldwide.

Get Involved tri
Get Involved Overview
  • Partners in Science
  • Estate & Planned Giving
  • Attend an Event
  • Gift Opportunities
Get Involved

Join a community of dedicated people who share the Weizmann Institute’s commitment to shaping a better world through science.

News & Media tri
News & Media Overview
  • News & Media Archive
  • Coronavirus
  • Feature Stories
  • News Releases
  • In The News
  • Video Gallery
  • Ad Campaigns
  • Celebrating Great Minds
News & Media

Learn about the Weizmann Institute’s latest groundbreaking discoveries and the American Committee’s activities across the country.

Blog tri
  • The Curiosity Review
Blog

Popular science for the curious-minded: The Curiosity Review brings discovery to life.

Contact

Search Results

  • SEARCH BY KEYWORD
  • SEARCH BY TAG
View Articles by Tag:
  • View Articles by Tag
  • Algorithims (6)
  • Alternative energy (27)
  • Alzheimers (44)
  • Archaeology (37)
  • Artificial intelligence (20)
  • Astrophysics (108)
  • Autism (22)
  • Awards (119)
  • Bacteria (107)
  • Behavior (9)
  • Biochemistry (101)
  • Biofuel (7)
  • Biology (309)
  • Biomolecular sciences (7)
  • Blood (43)
  • Brain (175)
  • Cancer (163)
  • Cancer treatment (127)
  • Central nervous system (9)
  • Chemistry (78)
  • Children (7)
  • Circadian clock (1)
  • Climate change (73)
  • Clinical trials (40)
  • Collaborations (19)
  • Community (279)
  • Computers (73)
  • Copaxone (12)
  • Coronavirus (7)
  • Culture (359)
  • Diabetes (32)
  • Earth (74)
  • Education (157)
  • Environment (92)
  • Enzymes (29)
  • Evolution (89)
  • Fertility (20)
  • Fungus (4)
  • Genetics (109)
  • Genomics (3)
  • Heart (5)
  • Heart disease (3)
  • Humanity (83)
  • Immune system (149)
  • Immunology (10)
  • Immunotherapy (34)
  • Inflammation (19)
  • Leadership (114)
  • Leukemia (12)
  • Materials (44)
  • Mathematics (62)
  • Medicine (84)
  • Memory (39)
  • Mental health (58)
  • Metabolism (51)
  • Microbiology (2)
  • Microbiome (10)
  • Molecular cell biology (9)
  • Molecular genetics (61)
  • Multiple sclerosis (12)
  • Nanoscience (33)
  • Nature (4)
  • Neurobiology (2)
  • Neuroscience (207)
  • Nutrition (72)
  • Optics (34)
  • Organs (11)
  • Parkinsons (11)
  • Personalized medicine (5)
  • Philanthropy (148)
  • Physics (139)
  • Plants (56)
  • Proteins (96)
  • Quantum computer (3)
  • Quantum physics (2)
  • Quantum theory (34)
  • Robots (8)
  • Security (21)
  • Senses (115)
  • Sensors (8)
  • Smoking (1)
  • Solar power (19)
  • Space (110)
  • Stem cells (49)
  • Technology (206)
  • Vaccine (40)
  • Virus (135)
  • Water (40)
  • Weather (1)
  • Women (115)
  • World hunger (17)
Filter by Time:
  • All
  • Past Day
  • Past Week
  • Past Month
  • Past Year
  • Past Three Years
Clear Filters

115 results for Senses

Sensing Autism: Advances in Research
Sensing Autism: Advances in Research

https://www.weizmann-usa.org/news-media/feature-stories/sensing-autism-advances-in-research/

Apr 22, 2019... There is a reason that a puzzle piece is the symbol of autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Despite all the research, despite the advances, ASD continues to be an enigma. What causes it? Can it be diagnosed earlier? What are the differences between an autistic and a neurotypical brain?
One field of research – the role of the sense of smell – is producing surprising results that could lead to means of early diagnosis and intervention, as well as shed light on the misreading of social cues that is so common in autism.

TAGS: Neuroscience, Evolution, Senses, Autism

Calculating Whiskers Send Precise Information to the Brain
Calculating Whiskers Send Precise Information to the Brain

https://www.weizmann-usa.org/news-media/news-releases/calculating-whiskers-send-precise-information-to-the-brain/

Jan 28, 2016... As our sensory organs register objects and structures in the outside world, they are continually engaged in two-way communication with the brain. In research recently published in Nature Neuroscience, Weizmann Institute of Science researchers found that for rats, which use their whiskers to feel out their surroundings at night, clumps of nerve endings called mechanoreceptors, which are located at the base of each whisker, act as tiny calculators. These receptors continuously compute the way the whisker’s base rotates in its socket, expressing it as a fraction of the entire projected rotation of the whisker, so that the brain is continually updated on the way that the whisker’s rotation is being followed through.

TAGS: Neuroscience, Senses, Computers, Sensors

100 Bats and a Long, Dark Tunnel: One Neuroscientist’s Quest to Unlock the Secrets of 3D Navigation
100 Bats and a Long, Dark Tunnel: One Neuroscientist’s Quest to Unlock the Secrets of 3D Navigation

https://www.weizmann-usa.org/news-media/in-the-news/100-bats-and-a-long-dark-tunnel-one-neuroscientist-s-quest-to-unlock-the-secrets-of-3d-navigation/

Jul 11, 2018... Nachum Ulanovsky with one of his research bats. Credit: David Vaaknin for Nature
On a sun-parched patch of land in Rehovot, Israel, two neuroscientists peer into the darkness of a 200-metre-long tunnel of their own design. The fabric panels of the snaking structure shimmer in the heat, while, inside, a study subject is navigating its dim length. Finally, out of the blackness bursts a bat, which executes a mid-air backflip to land upside down, hanging at the tunnel’s entrance.

TAGS: Brain, Neuroscience, Senses, Memory

Weizmann Institute Invention Lets Disabled People Steer a Wheelchair and Communicate by Sniffing
Weizmann Institute Invention Lets Disabled People Steer a Wheelchair and Communicate by Sniffing

https://www.weizmann-usa.org/news-media/news-releases/weizmann-institute-invention-lets-disabled-people-steer-a-wheelchair-and-communicate-by-sniffing/

Jul 27, 2010... REHOVOT, ISRAEL—July 27, 2010—A unique device based on sniffing—inhaling and exhaling through the nose—might enable numerous disabled people to navigate wheelchairs or communicate with their loved ones. Sniffing technology might even be used in the future to create a sort of "third hand" to assist healthy surgeons or pilots.
Developed by Prof. Noam Sobel, electronics engineers Dr. Anton Plotkin and Aharon Weissbrod, and research student Lee Sela in the Weizmann Institute of Science's Department of Neurobiology, the new system identifies changes in air pressure inside the nostrils and translates these into electrical signals. The device was tested on healthy volunteers as well as quadriplegics, and the results showed that the method is easily mastered. Users were able to navigate a wheelchair around a complex path or play a computer game with nearly the speed and accuracy of a mouse or joystick.

TAGS: Technology, Brain, Senses, Sensors

New Active Scents are About to Change How We Drive
New Active Scents are About to Change How We Drive

https://www.weizmann-usa.org/news-media/in-the-news/new-active-scents-are-about-to-change-how-we-drive/

Nov 05, 2019... Photo via Shutterstock.com
Stinky cars — everyone knows them. We’ve all stepped inside vehicles with a lingering scent of cigarette smoke, a forgotten banana peel or other olfactory nastiness.
Car dealers and rental agencies typically spray perfume or air freshener to mask offending smells. But about 30% of people don’t like the smell of perfume. Many others are allergic to various scents.

TAGS: Culture, Technology, Brain, Senses

Rose Scents While You Sleep Can Boost Your Memory
Rose Scents While You Sleep Can Boost Your Memory

https://www.weizmann-usa.org/news-media/in-the-news/rose-scents-while-you-sleep-can-boost-your-memory/

Mar 09, 2020... In a study published by scientists from Tel Aviv University and the Weizmann Institute of Science in Current Biology, participants were exposed to the scent of roses while they were asked to remember the location of words presented on either the left or right sides of a computer screen.
They were then tested on their memory of the word locations before proceeding to nap at the lab. While napping, the scent of roses was administered again, but this time only to one nostril.

TAGS: Neuroscience, Senses, Memory

New Israeli Research Into Genomes Sheds Light on Causes of Deafness
New Israeli Research Into Genomes Sheds Light on Causes of Deafness

https://www.weizmann-usa.org/news-media/in-the-news/new-israeli-research-into-genomes-sheds-light-on-causes-of-deafness/

Nov 12, 2017... Photo by Shutterstock
Researchers on the quest to solve the puzzle of what causes deafness got one small step closer with the announcement that scientists at Tel Aviv University and the Weizmann Institute of Science have mapped a certain type of RNA (a molecule essential to the coding and expression of genes) that exists in close proximity to the genes related to hearing.
The molecules in question are known as “long non-coding RNAs” (lncRNA for short). Non-coding RNAs, as the name suggests, do not “code” for protein in the body, but they do act as regulatory molecules and they can have a large impact on where in the body and when during development or adulthood genes are expressed. As much as 98 percent of the human genome consists of these non-coding molecules.

TAGS: Genetics, Senses

Perfumes: Why Some Are More Appealing Than Others
Perfumes: Why Some Are More Appealing Than Others

https://www.weizmann-usa.org/news-media/in-the-news/perfumes-why-some-are-more-appealing-than-others/

Nov 04, 2010... A fragrance that sends one woman into a pleasure-swoon might make another hold her nose. What creates the perfect match is a stroke of alchemical luck.
We may be drawn to a perfume for many reasons: because it reminds us of a garden—or a person—we once loved; because we hope it will reduce all men who cross our path to helpless, love-struck fools. It’s difficult to imagine reaching for a scent thinking, Here is a fragrance that will put people off. Yet a quick glance at the discussion boards on juice-junkie sites such as Nstperfume.com or Basenotes.net will verify that a perfume that sends one person into raptures of delight is practically guaranteed to be someone else’s eau no. Just as some will linger in the wake of a cigar with noses aloft while others flee its acrid aftermath, we all experience scent differently.

TAGS: Culture, Technology, Brain, Senses

Four Scientific Studies That Give Us Clues To Improve Our Creativity
Four Scientific Studies That Give Us Clues To Improve Our Creativity

https://www.weizmann-usa.org/news-media/in-the-news/four-scientific-studies-that-give-us-clues-to-improve-our-creativity/

Feb 15, 2018... Photo by Jesse Orrico on Unsplash, Science continually proves the pliability of our creativity.
I have an obsession and it is human creativity. It's why I'm in the advertising business. It's why I started an idea-generating company. And it's why I crave scientific studies that may give us clues as to how we can improve our creativity. Since 2013 I've been reporting here on Forbes.com the most interesting of those scientific studies and let's just say those scientists have been busy.

TAGS: Culture, Neuroscience, Senses

The Scent of a Handshake
The Scent of a Handshake

https://www.weizmann-usa.org/news-media/news-releases/the-scent-of-a-handshake/

Mar 03, 2015... REHOVOT, ISRAEL—March 3, 2015—Why do people shake hands? A new study from the Weizmann Institute of Science suggests that one of the reasons for this ancient custom may be to check out each other’s odors. Even if we are not consciously aware of this, handshaking may provide people with a socially acceptable way of communicating via the sense of smell.
Not only do people often sniff their own hands, but they do so for a much longer time after shaking someone else’s hand, the study found. As reported today in the journal eLife, the number of seconds the subjects spent sniffing their own right hand more than doubled after an experimenter greeted them with a handshake.

TAGS: Culture, Brain, Evolution, Senses

First … 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Last
Back Next
SHARE

Our Achievements

Learn more about remarkable Weizmann Institute achievements that are enhancing and transforming our lives.

Learn More

Support Our Flagship Projects

Help us accelerate exciting initiatives in three forward-looking fields: neuroscience, physics, and artificial intelligence.

Learn More

Newsletter

Get the latest news and breakthroughs from the Weizmann Institute of Science.

About Us
  • Education
  • Mission & History
  • Board of Directors
  • The Campus
  • Careers
Our Achievements
  • Cancer
  • Technology
  • Education
  • Our Planet
  • Health & Medicine
  • Physical World
Get Involved
  • Partners in Science
  • Estate & Planned Giving
  • Attend an Event
  • Gift Opportunities
News & Media Blog: Curiosity Review Donate Now Contact Us
Privacy Policy Gift Acceptance Policy Financial Information

©2023 American Committee for the Weizmann Institute of Science

Charity Navigator

FOR THE FOURTH CONSECUTIVE YEAR

Platinum Transparency 2023