Un centre littéraire explore l'impact du livre This is Your Brain on Music

Un article récent sur Literary Hub discute de l'influence d'un ouvrage notable en neurosciences.

L'article intitulé How This is Your Brain on Music Transformed Neuroscience est paru sur le site. Il a été publié le 20 mai 2026. Aucune précision supplémentaire sur des événements ou des développements spécifiques n'a été fournie par les sources disponibles.

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LitHub spotlight on overlooked queer books amid shadowed NYT reviews, symbolizing literary representation gaps.
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LitHub launches reviews of queer books overlooked by New York Times

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Literary Hub has published a series of 13 reviews highlighting books by trans and queer authors that received no coverage in the New York Times Book Review from 2013 to 2022. The project, titled 'What Was Lost: A Queer Accounting of the NY Times Book Review, 2013-2022,' responds to the editorial tenure of Pamela Paul, who led the section during that period and later wrote an anti-trans essay. Organized by Sandy E. Allen and Maris Kreizman, the initiative aims to address gaps in literary criticism and foster discussion on representation.

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A new piece on Literary Hub examines what internet search data reveals about human experiences of grief and solitude.

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Literary Hub has released an article exploring Ukrainian literature as a lens for understanding the ongoing war. Titled 'Writing While the Alphabet Burns: Ukrainian Literature to Help Understand the Ongoing War,' it appeared on the site recently.

Literary Hub released a new piece exploring how writers blend family history with personal experience in nonfiction.

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University of Notre Dame researchers report evidence that general intelligence is associated with how efficiently and flexibly brain networks coordinate across the whole connectome, rather than being localized to a single “smart” region. The findings, published in Nature Communications, are based on neuroimaging and cognitive data from 831 Human Connectome Project participants and an additional 145 adults from the INSIGHT Study.

 

 

 

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