Login/Register
Login
Register
Podcaster Register
×
Home
Top Podcaster
Networks
By Language
By Country
By Category
About Us
Contact Us
Faqs
Features
News & Blogs
Privacy Policy
Terms Of Use
☰
Home
Top Podcaster
Guest
Login
Register
Podcaster Register
Comedy
Arts
Games & Hobbies
Business
Motivation
More
Religion & Spirituality
Education
Arts and Design
Health
Fashion & Beauty
Government & Organizations
Kids & family
Music
News & Politics
Science & Medicine
Society & Culture
Sports & Recreation
TV & Film
Technology
Philosophy
Storytelling
Horror and Paranomal
True Crime
Leisure
Travel
Fiction
Crypto
Marketing
History
Home
Top Podcaster
Networks
By Language
By Country
By Category
About Us
Contact Us
Faqs
Features
News & Blogs
Privacy Policy
Terms Of Use
Search
By Category
Arts
Arts and Design
Business
Comedy
Crypto
Education
Fashion & Beauty
Fiction
Games & Hobbies
Government & Organizations
Health
History
Horror and Paranomal
Kids & family
Leisure
Marketing
Motivation
Music
News & Politics
Philosophy
Religion & Spirituality
Science & Medicine
Society & Culture
Sports & Recreation
Storytelling
Technology
Travel
True Crime
TV & Film
By Language
Afar
Afrikaans
Akan
Albanian
Amharic
Arabic
Armenian
Assamese
Azerbaijani
Bambara
Basque
Belarusian
Bengali
Bihari languages
Bosnian
Breton
Bulgarian
Burmese
Catalan Valencian Active
Central Khmer
Chamorro
Chechen
Chichewa
Corsican
Croatian
Czech
Danish
Dutch
Dzongkha
English
Esperanto
Estonian
Ewe
Faroese
Finnish
French
Fulah
Gaelic, Scottish
Galician
Georgian
Georgien
German
Greek
Greek (modern)
Greenlandic
Gujarati
Hausa
Hebrew (modern)
Hindi
Hungarian
Icelandic
Indonesian
Irish
Italian
Japanese
Javanese
Kannada
Kazakh
Kinyarwanda
Korean
Kurdish
Kyrgyz/ Kirghiz
Latin
Latvian
Lithuanian
Luxembourgish
Macedonian
Maithili
Malagasy
Malay
Malayalam
Maltese
Mandarin Chinese
Maori
Marathi
Mongolian
Nepali
North Ndebele
Northern Sami
Norwegian
Norwegian Bokmål
Norwegian Nynorsk
Oriya
Oromo
Pashto
Persian
Polish
Portuguese
Punjabi
Quechua
Romanian
Romansh
Russian
Sanskrit
Serbian
Serbian
Serbo-Croato-Slovenian
Sindhi
Sinhala
Slovak
Slovenian
Somali
South Ndebele
Spanish
Sundanese
Swahili
Swedish
Tagalog
Tajik
Tamil
Tatar
Telugu
Thai
Tibetan
Tigrinya
Tongan
Tswana
Turkish
Twi
Uighur. Uyghur
Ukrainian
Urdu
Uzbek
Vietnamese
Welsh
Wolof
Xhosa
Yiddish
Yoruba
Zulu
By Country
Afghanistan
Algeria
Andorra
Argentina
Armenia
Australia
Austria
Azerbaijan
Bangladesh
Belgium
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Brazil
Bulgaria
Canada
Chile
China
Colombia
Costa Rica
Croatia
Cyprus
Czech Republic
Denmark
Dominican Republic
Ecuador
Egypt
El Salvador
Estonia
Faroe Islands
Finland
France
Georgia
Germany
Greece
Hong Kong
Hungary
Iceland
India
Indonesia
Iran
Ireland
Israel
Italy
Japan
Kazakhstan
Kuwait
Lao Peoples Democratic Republic
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Mexico
Namibia
Netherlands
New Zealand
Niger
North Korea
Norway
Pakistan
Panama
Peru
Philippines
Poland
Portugal
Puerto Rico
Republic of the Congo
Romania
Russia
Saudi Arabia
Serbia
Slovenia
Somalia
South Africa
South Korea
Spain
Sri Lanka
Sweden
Switzerland
Syria
Taiwan
Tajikistan
Thailand
Turkey
UAE
UK
Ukraine
USA
Uzbekistan
Venezuela
Vietnam
Home
>
Short Wave
> A new approach to brain health, one neuron at a time
Podcast:
Short Wave
Episode:
A new approach to brain health, one neuron at a time
Category:
Science & Medicine
Duration:
00:13:18
Publish Date:
2026-04-15 07:00:00
Description:
Neuroscientist
Paul Nuyujukian
likens the brain to a stadium full of people. To eavesdrop on the crowd you
could
put a microphone in the middle of the stadium. But to understand the conversations you need to record individual people. He thinks about the brain the same way. To understand brain disease, he studies neurons—one at a time. And his insights are shedding light on a big global issue—stroke. The World Health Organization predicts
one in four adults
will have a stroke in their lifetime. Strokes can cause death, or lead to paralysis or speech problems. But there’s still a lot researchers don’t know about how the brain recovers from an event like a stroke. Nuyujukian directs a lab at Stanford University that studies how the brain controls movement, including after neurological events like stroke. We get into how he does this, and why he hopes his research could eventually help people who’ve been paralyzed.
Email us your questions about the brain – or anything else to do with science at
shortwave@npr.org
. We may turn it into an episode in the future!
Listen to every episode of Short Wave sponsor-free and support our work at NPR by signing up for Short Wave+ at
plus.npr.org/shortwave
.
See
pcm.adswizz.com
for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.
NPR Privacy Policy
Total Play:
0
Your browser does not support the audio element.
Some more Podcasts by NPR
1K+ Episodes
The Indicato ..
10+