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  2. Brain Rules - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brain_Rules

    Brain Rules: 12 Principles for Surviving and Thriving at Work, Home, and School is a book written by John Medina, a developmental molecular biologist. [1] The book has tried to explain how the brain works in twelve perspectives: exercise, survival, wiring, attention, short-term memory, long-term memory, sleep, stress, multisensory perception, vision, gender and exploration. [2]

  3. Susannah Cahalan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Susannah_Cahalan

    Susannah Cahalan (born January 30, 1985) is an American writer and author, known for writing the memoir Brain on Fire: My Month of Madness, about her hospitalization with a rare autoimmune disease, anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis.

  4. Ronald Kotulak - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ronald_Kotulak

    Kotulak won the Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory Journalism in 1994 for his "lucid coverage of current developments in neurological science." [4] His winning articles, Research Unraveling Mysteries of the Brain and Lost Lives and the Roots of Violence both explore environmental effects on early brain development.

  5. Brian Lumley - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brian_Lumley

    Brian Lumley (2 December 1937 – 2 January 2024) was an English author of horror fiction.He came to prominence in the 1970s writing in the Cthulhu Mythos created by American writer H. P. Lovecraft but featuring the new character Titus Crow, and went on to greater fame in the 1980s with the best-selling Necroscope series, initially centered on character Harry Keogh, who can communicate with ...

  6. Brain (novel) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brain_(novel)

    She is placed in a vat of liquid and her brain is connected to a computer. The same thing happens to other patients too. The protagonist Dr. Martin Philips, a doctor in neuroradiology at the NYC medical center is involved in creating a self-diagnostic x-ray machine , along with William Michaels, who is a researcher graduating from MIT and also ...

  7. William Walker Atkinson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Walker_Atkinson

    In any case, with or without a co-author, Atkinson started writing a series of books under the name Yogi Ramacharaka in 1903, ultimately releasing more than a dozen titles under this pseudonym. The Ramacharaka books were published by the Yogi Publication Society in Chicago and reached more people than Atkinson's New Thought works did.

  8. Get the Moses Lake, WA local weather forecast by the hour and the next 10 days.

  9. Mark Phillips (author) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Phillips_(author)

    Brain Twister by Mark Phillips (Pyramid Books, 1962) Mark Phillips was the joint pseudonym used by science fiction writers Laurence Mark Janifer and Randall Philip Garrett in the early 1960s. Together they authored several humorous short novels in the so-called "Psi-Power" series: Brain Twister (1962), The Impossibles (1963), and Supermind (1963).