Encephalon
A neuroscience blog carnival
Main Entry: en·ceph·a·lon
Pronunciation: in-’se-f&-”län, -l&n
Function: noun
Inflected Form(s): plural en·ceph·a·la /-l&/
Etymology: New Latin, from Greek enkephalos
: the vertebrate brain
If you’d like to contribute, send an email with links to up to 3 blog posts to encephalon{dot}host{at}gmail{dot}com or visit this page.
Submission Guidelines
Contributors can submit up to 3 posts in any of the following categories:
artificial intelligence
biological & cognitive anthropology
cognitive neuroscience
cognitive science
consciousness
mind-brain philosophy
molecular neurobiology
neuroethology
neuropsychology
psychology
There is no deadline for submitting a contribution. Submissions that are too late for an edition will be sent to the host of the following edition. Links to each edition of Encephalon will be archived below.
Submit up to 3 blog posts per edition. Contributors will automatically be added to the host list unless they request otherwise
Archives
1. Neurophilosophy, 3rd July, 2006
2. Pure Pedantry, 17th July, 2006
3. Thinking Meat, 31st July, 2006
4. The Neurocritic, 14th August, 2006
5. Developing Intelligence, 28th August, 2006
6. Retrospectacle, 11th September, 2006
7. OmniBrain, 25th September, 2006
8. Cognitive Daily, 9th October, 2006
9. Migrations, 23rd October, 2006
10. A Blog Around The Clock, 6th November, 2006
11. The Mouse Trap, 20th November, 2006
12. AlphaPsy, 4th December, 2006
13. Neurotopia v2.0, 20th December, 2006
14. Mixing Memory, 15th January, 2007
15. SharpBrains, 29th January, 2007
16. Mind Hacks, 12th February, 2007
17. Pure Pedantry, 26th February, 2007
18. Pharyngula, 13th March, 2007
19. Peripersonal Space, 26th March, 2007
20. Neurontic, 9th April, 2007
21. Ouroboros, 23rd April, 2007
22. John Hawks Anthropology Blog, 8th May, 2007
23. Madam Fathom, 21st May, 2007
24. The Phineas Gage Fan Club, 4th June, 2007
25. PsyBlog, 18th June, 2007
26. Neurophilosophy, 2nd July, 2007
27. The Neurocontrarian, 16th July, 2007
28. Bohemian Scientist, 30th July, 2007
29. Memoirs of a Postgrad, 13th August, 2007
30. Neurofuture, 27th August, 2007
31. Dr. Deb Serani, 10th September, 2007
32. Living the Scientific Life, 24th September, 2007
33. Biotunes, 8th October, 2007

[...] Find out more about Encephalon here [...]
http://www.encephalon.eu –> you have more about encephalon on this site. Neuro-death-metal, neuro-grind… “Neuropathology” by ENCEPHALON
Very amazing site! I wish I could do something as nice as you did…Mary
Greetings, I am from Kosovo in Southeastern Europe. I am student in the last year in the Faculty of Medicine University of Prishtina KOSOVA.
I have a special interest in neuroscience, particularlly neuroanatomy, and am currentlly working on a web site: http://www.neuroanatomia.tk
I really respect your work, and it is very interesting to surf your blog. It is a pleasure for me to put a link to your blog on my web side.
I wanted to send you this from Hippocrates, it is probably someone will have read about it erlier. Attributed to Hippocrates, Fifth Century, B.C. (adapted
from Principles of Neural Science 4th edition, by Eric R. Kandel, James H. Schwartz, and Thomas M. Jessell. ©2000 McGraw-Hill.
“Men ought to know that from the brain, and from the brain only arise our pleasures, joys, laughter and jests, as well as our sorrows, pain griefs and tears.
Throw it in particular, we think, see, hear, we distinguish the ugly form beautiful, the bad from the good, the pleasant from the unpleasant……. It is the
same think which make as mad or delirious, inspires us with dread and fear, whether bu night or by day, brings sleeplessness inopportune mistakes, aimless
anxieties, absent-mindedness and acts that are contrary to habits. This thinks that we suffer all come from the brain, wen it is not healthy, but become
abnormally hot, cold, moist, or dry, or suffers any other unnatural affection to which it was not accustomed. Madness comes from its moistness. When the
brain is abnormally moist of necessity it moves, and when it moves neither sight nor hearing are still, but we see or hear now one think and now another,
and the tongue speaks in accordance with the things seen and heard on any occasion. But all the time the brain is still, a men can think properly.”
With respect
Labinot Marku
[...] then, my relief when she happily spent a few hours with me going over the printed submissions for Encephalon #15. The conversation went so well, that
we are adding it to our Neuroscience Interview Series on [...]
[...] Biology bloggers have Tangled Bank. Medical bloggers have Grand Rounds. Neuroscience bloggers have Encephalon. And now math bloggers have the
Carnival of Mathematics. If you have anything to blog about [...]
I’m at the crossroads between writers and science, creativity and knowledge.
http://schmiodile.blogspot.com
[...] as an anti-aging therapeutic in the brain has been included in the most recent installation of Encephalon, a carnival devoted to neuroscience. (Another
featured article on the same subject can be found at [...]
Yes: minds are what brains do. Sometimes you can see that ‘the mind’ is holographic - or reality is holographic: crystal clear and perhaps ‘not there at all.’
These moments lighten the load we need not carry. Please see spiritual psychology for a quantum perspective. Geoff.
[...] errors as the direct result of their actions rather than the indirect consequence.” Welcome Encephalon readers! Related posts None [...]
[...] 2007 Shiver me timbers matey! Captain Jake has just posted a pirate-style seventeenth edition of Encephalon over at Pure Pedantry. The next edition
will be hosted by P. Z. Myers at Pharyngula in two weeks [...]
[...] Neural Gourmet Encephalon bio::blogs Dr.Katte’s [...]
With great respect to the brilliant work of the most respected neuroscientist Santiago Ramon Y Cajal.
“Like the entomologist in search of brightly colored butterflies, my attention hunted, in the garden of the gray matter, cells with delicate and elegant form,
the mysterious butterflies of the soul.” Santiago Ramon Y Cajal (1935)
[Adopted from Gilbert, Scott F., Developmental Biology 4th ed..
©1994 Sinauer Associates, Inc.]
[...] Hier geht’s zu den bisherigen Ausgaben. [...]
[...] even more neuroscience fun, you can explore the back issues of the Encephalon blog carnival, permanently link-archived at Neurophilosophy.) [...]
[...] blog anthologies. If you are the host, take the time to figure out what that central theme is. Encephalon is about neuroscience. The Tar-Heel Tavern is
about topics pertaining to North Carolina. The [...]
[...] , Neurodegeneration , Stem cells , Alzheimer’s Welcome to the 21st installation of Encephalon, a blog carnival devoted to neuroscience. The carnival
is organized by the inimitable [...]
[...] 28, 2007 Posted by Johan in Off Topic. trackback The 24th issue of Neuroscience blogging carnival Encephalon will be hosted here at the Phineas Gage Fan Club on Monday June 4 (a week from today). Send up to [...]
Neuronal networks on silicon chip. “Semiconductors with Brain”
Both, computers and brains work electrically. However, their charge carriers are
different – electrons in solid silicon and ions in liquid water. It is an intellectual and
technological challenge to join these different systems directly on the level of electronic
and ionic signals. Already in the 18th century, Luigi Galvani established the
electrical coupling of inorganic solids and excitable living tissue.
Today, after fifty years of dramatic developments in semiconductor
microtechnology and cellular neurobiology, we may envisage a multisite integration of
microionics and microelectronics with numerous nerve cells and microelectronic
devices. Peter Fromherz
Max Planck Institute for Biochemistry
Department of Membrane and Neurophysics
Martinsried / München
The researchers under Peter Fromherz have reported this news in the online edition
of the Journal of Neurophysiology (May 10, 2006).
Lists of references to publications regarding Cells on Chips [PDF, 85 kB],
Voltage Sensitive Dyes [PDF, 69 kB] and the complete list of
publications by Peter Fromherz [PDF, 112 kB] Visit - http://www.biochem.mpg.de/en/research/rd/fromherz/publications/index.html
[…] to the 24th issue of Neuroscience blogging carnival Encephalon! This issue covers all levels of analysis, from neurobiology to morality and altruism, via a quote […]
Check This Top 10 Mysteries of the Mind.
http://www.livescience.com/health/top10_mysteriesofthemind.html
[...] move comes just in time for the first anniversary of Encephalon, one of the most active and well-subscribed biological blog carnivals out there, which the [...]
[...] and Paul Decelles of The Force That Through… for the opportunity to host Tangled Bank, Encephalon, and Mendel’s Garden, respectively; participation in blog carnivals has been a superb way to [...]
[...] to the thirty-third edition of Encephalon. We at the GNIF Brain Blogger are honored to host this neuroscience blogging carnival. We received [...]
[...] Encephalon [...]
[...] Encephalon « Neurophilosophy [...]
[...] on August 26th, 2006? That day, Mo, the blogger behind ScienceBlogs’ Neurophilosophy, launched the Encephalon blog carnival to present, every other week, a selection of the best neuroscience and psychology [...]
[...] links due to Neurophilosophy, Sharpbrains. Thanks to the new Neurophilosophy for starting all [...]
[...] older editions, Neurophilosophy has the list of older Encephalon editions from the very first in July 2006 running through [...]