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Lynda Richardson In late 1925, one J. L. Clark discovered an unusual mouse in a house in Detroit. It could sing. And so he did what anyone might have done: he captured the mouse and put it in a cage.
Unless you are Cinderella and the singing mice are making you a ball gown, no one wants a mouse in the bedroom. Finding a mouse is startling and where there is one, there are usually more.
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory neuroscientist Arkarup Banerjee is using singing mice, like the one shown here, to understand how our brains control timing and communication. These studies may offer ...
Study led by Dr. Michael Long of NYU Langone Health reveals how mammalian brains accomplish the fast verbal turn-taking that makes conversation possible. Disclaimer: AAAS and EurekAlert! are not ...