Microbiome Research Using AI Leads to a More Personalized Approach to Medicine

If you Google “microbiome,” you’ll see over 17 million results, with most of them leading to the latest research on how gut microbiota is linked to health and disease. However, even with the deluge of information about this area, mystery still surrounds these microorganisms. Researchers are working harder than ever to study individual microbial species to decipher […]

How the Gut Microbiome Can Save Lives

To stay healthy, humans rely on a diverse community of viruses, fungi, and bacteria in their guts. Like Russian nesting dolls, our bodies contain about 38 trillion bacterial cells that make up our gut microbiome, and those cells have their own residents and so on. Most people are aware that this community of gut bacteria, or […]

New Research Says We Hold the Power to Change Our Personality Traits

Dr. Benjamin Hardy, an organizational psychologist, just released his new book, “Personality Isn’t Permanent” and his research suggests our personalities can and do change over time. Moreover, Hardy takes his research a step further to reveal that everyone can transform any negative personality trait or habit with consistent effort. This article looks at the latest […]

Is Split Brain Theory Really a Myth? What New Research Says

If you were to split a brain in half – would your consciousness also be divided? What about the notion that some people are more right-brained and others more left-brained?

In the original findings of split-brain theory, researchers believe that patients who underwent surgery to sever the corpus callosum, the nerve tract connecting the two hemispheres of the brain, would also experience a split within their consciousness. They also hypothesized that the right and left hemispheres of the brain perform very different functions – or brain laterality. They believed that when the two sides of the brain weren’t able to communicate with each other, they responded differently to stimuli, indicating that the hemispheres have different functions. Are these claims true, just a myth, or somewhere in-between?