UK academics say latest chemicals are ‘wake-up call’ and urge global action to stop weaponisation of neuroscience...
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Maroc - WN.COM - Science - 23/Nov 00:14
Sophisticated and deadly “brain weapons” that can attack or alter human consciousness, perception, memory or behaviour are no longer the stuff of science fiction, two British academics argue. Michael Crowley and Malcolm Dando, of Bradford University, are about to publish a book that they believe should be a wake-up call to the world. They are this weekend travelling to The Hague for a key meeting of states, arguing that the human mind is a new frontier in warfare and there needs to be urgent global action to prevent the weaponisation of neuroscience. “It does sound like science fiction,” said Crowley. “The danger is that it becomes science fact.” The book, published by the Royal Society of...
UK academics say latest chemicals are ‘wake-up call’ and urge global action to stop weaponisation of neuroscience...
UK academics say latest chemicals are ‘wake-up call’ and urge global action to stop weaponisation of neuroscience...
UK academics say latest chemicals are ‘wake-up call’ and urge global action to stop weaponisation of neuroscience
The mind really is a battlefield. Advances in neurological medicine might seem like a boon to humanity. However, UK scientists are warning that the...
The mind really is a battlefield. Advances in neurological medicine might seem like a boon to humanity. However, UK scientists are warning that the...
Most people can imagine a dog barking or hear a song playing in their brain. But about one in 125 have a silent mind. Now scientists are...
Most people can imagine a dog barking or hear a song playing in their brain. But about one in 125 have a silent mind. Now scientists are...
A lifetime of reading has convinced me that books are more likely to get worse — not better — as they go. “The Breath of the Gods” bucks that...
Neuroendocrinologist Catherine Woolley and her team at Northwestern University were studying synaptic modulation in female mice when they ran into...
Neuroendocrinologist Catherine Woolley and her team at Northwestern University were studying synaptic modulation in female mice when they ran into...