You are able to gift 5 more articles this month. Anyone can access the link you share with no account required. Learn more. NEW YORK, N.Y. – Bruce S. McEwen of Harpswell and Hillsborough, N.J. died on ...
This article was published in Scientific American’s former blog network and reflects the views of the author, not necessarily those of Scientific American A leading figure in the field of neuroscience ...
There's a lot that we can learn from the celebrated life of Neuroscientist Bruce McEwen, particularly how stress affects our brains in a big way. McEwen's work expanded the modern view of stress, ...
It was a staple of medical thinking dating to the 1910s that stress was the body’s alarm system, switching on only when terrible things happened, often leaving a person with an either-or choice: fight ...
Bruce McEwen, a neuroendocrinologist at Rockefeller University, died January 2 after a brief illness. He was 81 years old. With his wife, Karen Bulloch, a Rockefeller professor, he studied how immune ...
New Orleans -- Age may be more related to reactions to stress and the absence of disease rather than to a person's chronological age, say leading researchers in the fields of neurobiology and ...
Dr. C. Sue Carter, Distinguished Research Scientist and Director Emerita of the Kinsey Institute, has been awarded the 2024 Bruce McEwen Lifetime Achievement Award by the International Society of ...
Bruce McEwen is a pioneering expert on the ways in which the brain influences the body. He is the author of ""The End of Stress As We Know It" (with Elizabeth Norton Lasley, published by Joseph Henry ...
Many who knew Bruce S. McEwen, Ph.D., either at The Rockefeller University where he ran a laboratory, or as a guest at one of his homes in New Jersey or Maine, said the same thing: For a high-powered ...
Do grant renewals, teaching responsibilities or troubling newspaper headlines stress you out? If so, a book about stress from Bruce McEwen of Rockefeller University with science writer Elizabeth ...
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