The Rosenkranz Aging and Rejuvenation Seed Grant Program announced eight innovative new research projects with additional support from the Knight Initiative for Brain Resilience
Neuroscience News
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Announcing the 2026 Neurosciences Postdoctoral Scholars
Ten innovative postdoctoral scholars will pursue creative approaches to advance neuroscience and brain resilience research
Wu Tsai Neuro News
Knight Initiative news
Study of pythons’ extreme diet reveals new hunger-curbing molecule
The snakes’ unique feeding behavior offers new clues about the gut-brain axis—and hints of a potential weight-loss drug with fewer side effects than GLP-1 drugs
Research news
Watching a lifetime in motion reveals the architecture of aging
Knight Initiative scientists tracked every moment of the life of the African turquoise killifish, showing that behavior alone can forecast whether an animal will live a long or short life
Research news
Wu Tsai Neuro and Knight Initiative announce 2024 postdoctoral scholars
We are proud to welcome the 2024 Neurosciences Postdoctoral Scholars — ten young scientists pursuing novel, multi-disciplinary approaches to understanding the workings of the brain.
Wu Tsai Neuro News
Knight Initiative news
Nobel laureates and MacArthur fellows offer lessons in perseverance
Students learned how behind every success is a story of perseverance, frustration, and failure in a fall quarter class featuring Stanford’s own Nobel laureates and MacArthur “genius” fellows, including Wu Tsai Neuro affiliate Michelle Monje.
Researcher profiles
Awards and honors
Stanford Medicine brings autopsy suite, morgue and decedent care into a single hospital space
Stanford Hospital brings together two autopsy rooms, the morgue, including bereavement and viewing rooms, as well as decedent care team offices. The new space allows for more advanced research for the Knight Initiative for Brain Resilience and others.
Research news
Tony Wyss-Coray: The Science of Aging
The science to advance our understanding of the aging process—and to potentially slow it down—has made important strides. One of the leading scientists responsible for this work is Professor Tony Wyss-Coray, whose work has focused on brain aging.
Press coverage
Neurosciences seed grants fuel research in childhood epilepsy, eating disorders, Alzheimer's and more
The Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute at Stanford University is proud to announce the recipients of its fifth round of Seed Grants.
Wu Tsai Neuro News
Knight Initiative news
Stanford Medicine-led study finds way to predict which of our organs will fail first
A new study co-authored by Knight Initiative Director Tony Wyss-Coray demonstrates a simple way of studying organ aging by analyzing distinct proteins in blood, enabling the prediction of individuals’ risk for diseases.
Research news
Your Organs Might Be Aging at Different Rates
It turns out that your chronological age really is just a number. What’s more important for knowing disease risk is the biological age of each of your organs.
Press coverage
Using AI, scientists create blood test that measures organ aging and predicts disease risk
In today’s mostly plague- and famine-free world, if you can avoid more modern scourges like gun and car violence, you can expect your death to arrive not with a bang but a whimper; when one of your organs sput-sput-sputters out.
Press coverage
Can we get along?
Stanford Medicine queried Wu Tsai Neuro and Knight Initiative affiliates share their expertise on the what the human brain are thinking about humans vs AI.
Research news
Surprising finding links sleep, brain insulation, and neurodegeneration
Erin Gibson’s lab has discovered that the precursor cells to myelin-producing oligodendrocytes are regulated by the circadian system in mice. When that regulation breaks down, the researchers saw abnormal myelination — but also fragmented sleep.
Research news
Q&A: Linking sleep, brain insulation, and neurological disease with postdoc Daniela Rojo
Working in the Gibson Lab, Brain Resilience Postdoc Scholar Daniela Rojo looks at how abnormal changes in gene activity impact the cells involved in producing myelin to the extent that it leads to neurodegeneration in the brain.
Researcher profiles
Fixing the Aging Brain
The number one thing most people fear as they age is developing dementia. As the world’s population becomes increasingly older, this is a growing public health issue too.
Press coverage
Driver of neurodegenerative diseases revealed
In searching for how a gene mutation associated with the cell’s recycling center leads to a rare disease, Knight Initiative for Brain Resilience and Wu Tsai Neuro affiliate Monther Abu-Remaileh and team identified a missing link in neurodegenerative condi
Research news
Blood Cells Mutated in Old Age Protect Against Alzheimer’s Disease
Pathologist Siddhartha Jaiswal discovers a surprising twist to our biology: age-related mutations that increase the risk of blood disease also protect against brain disease.
Research news
Aging Mouse Brain Atlas Reveals White Matter Changes Most Over Time
A study in mice suggests that the most pronounced changes that occur over time are in the white matter—neurons that are integral to transmitting signals across the brain. The research also examined how two anti-aging treatments—caloric restriction and inf
Press coverage
Is the Brain’s White Matter an Unexpected Key to Aging and Memory?
Funded in part by the Knight Initiative, researchers at the Wyss-Coray Lab have discovered that age-related cognitive decline is most pronounced in the brain’s white matter in a new study.
Press coverage