Topic: Neuroscience

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This page shows the most relevant public items for Neuroscience, ranked by trend activity and review signal. Use weekly for fast changes, monthly for more stable patterns, and all-time for evergreen picks.

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  1. MEG-XL: Data-Efficient Brain-to-Text via Long-Context Pre-Training

    PaperFeb 12, 2026arXivDulhan Jayalath, Oiwi Parker Jones

    Decoding natural language from non-invasive brain recordings like Magnetoencephalography (MEG) remains a significant challenge due to the low signal-to-noise ratio and the scarcity of paired brain-...

  2. A multi-omics atlas of human hindbrain development

    PaperFeb 19, 2026bioRxivPiyush Joshi, Mari Sepp, Ioannis Sarropoulos, Nils Trost, Stefan M. Pfister, Lena M. Kutscher

    The human hindbrain is a phylogenetically ancient region responsible for vital physiological functions and sensory-motor coordination, yet its developmental logic remains poorly understood. We pres...

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What does this Neuroscience page rank?

It ranks public content for Neuroscience using recent discussion, review, and engagement signals so you can triage faster. This guidance is specific to Neuroscience topic page on Attendemia and is written so it still makes sense without reading other sections on the page.

How should I use weekly vs monthly vs all-time?

Use weekly for fast-moving updates, monthly for stable trend confirmation, and all-time for evergreen references. This guidance is specific to Neuroscience topic page on Attendemia and is written so it still makes sense without reading other sections on the page.

How can I discover organizations active in Neuroscience?

Use the linked entities section to jump to labs, companies, and experts connected to this topic and explore their timelines. This guidance is specific to Neuroscience topic page on Attendemia and is written so it still makes sense without reading other sections on the page.

Can I follow this topic for updates?

Yes. Use the follow button on this page to subscribe and track new high-signal activity. This guidance is specific to Neuroscience topic page on Attendemia and is written so it still makes sense without reading other sections on the page.