All posts tagged: Nerves

Alexander Zverev overcomes nerves to win a grand slam in five-set thriller

Alexander Zverev overcomes nerves to win a grand slam in five-set thriller

In his fourth major final, Alexander Zverev can finally call himself a grand slam champion, holding his nerve to beat Flavio Cobolli 6-1, 4-6, 6-4, 6-7 (5), 6-1. Both men were their own worst enemies at times, as the unforced error count mounted. But it was the favourite who was finally able to celebrate, falling backwards onto the clay in tears that were prompted by a mixture of both joy and relief. In 2024, when Zverev played his last Roland Garros final, his fortnight was overshadowed by a domestic violence trial that was discontinued the morning of the men’s semi-finals by a criminal court in Berlin. This time around, he has been the standout favourite since Jannik Sinner was undone by a combination of illness and heat in the second round. Only a year ago, Zverev proclaimed that “didn’t want to be the best player in history without a grand slam” and on Sunday, he ensured he would not be. The German had an ideal opportunity at the US Open in 2020 to win a …

What Your Pre-Race Nerves Are Telling You

What Your Pre-Race Nerves Are Telling You

The “taper crazies” are a well-known phenomenon among athletes in the days or weeks preceding an endurance event. You hyperfixate on the forecast, scrutinize the body’s sensations that could indicate injury or illness, toss and turn at night, triple-check your gear, invent impossible worst-case scenarios, and obsess over details that you cannot actually control. Even experienced athletes can be surprised by how psychologically unpredictable the days before a race can feel. When you are in the throes of this unique form of anxiety, it can feel distressing and uncomfortable. Many athletes may interpret these experiences as problematic or a sign of weakness. They start to feel anxious about being anxious. However, anxiety preceding any major event (particularly one involving uncertainty and performance pressure) is a normal psychological response. The more you have invested in the process, the more you care about the outcome. Instead of wrestling with pre-race anxiety, a more helpful starting point is to ask: What are these nerves trying to tell me? “This Matters to Me” Anxiety is often a sign that …

Obesity damages your face as well as nerves across the whole body, AI finds

Obesity damages your face as well as nerves across the whole body, AI finds

Obesity does not just enlarge fat stores, it appears to rework the body’s wiring and immune landscape in ways scientists have struggled to see. Now, whole-body mouse maps point to damaged facial sensory nerves, and to inflammatory hotspots with wider implications. Obesity is easy to spot on a scale. What has been much harder to see is how deeply it reshapes the body beneath the surface. This ranges from immune-cell buildups in swollen tissue to subtle damage in nerves that help animals sense the world around them. That blind spot may now be narrowing. A research team led by Prof. Ali Ertürk of Helmholtz Munich and Ludwig Maximilians University Munich (LMU) has developed a whole-body imaging and analysis system called MouseMapper. This deep-learning framework can scan intact transparent mice and automatically map nerves, immune cells, organs, and tissues across the body. In obese mice, the approach turned up widespread inflammatory changes. In addition, it revealed an unexpected form of nerve remodeling in the face. The work pushes past a long-standing problem in obesity research. Scientists …

Brain training game offers drug-free relief for chronic nerve pain

Brain training game offers drug-free relief for chronic nerve pain

A small trial of an interactive brain-training game has offered early hope for people living with chronic nerve pain. The technology, called PainWaive, teaches users to shift brainwave patterns linked to ongoing pain. It may one day provide a drug-free, at-home option for people who need more than pills. The system was developed by researchers at UNSW Sydney. A recent trial led by Professor Sylvia Gustin and Dr. Negin Hesam-Shariati from the NeuroRecovery Research Hub showed promising results. PainWaive uses an EEG headset and tablet-based game. The headset tracks brain activity in real time. As users adjust their brainwaves, the game responds on screen. The goal is to guide abnormal pain-linked activity toward a healthier pattern. Targeting Pain At Its Source Neuropathic pain happens when nerves or the nervous system send faulty pain signals. It can feel like burning, stabbing, stinging, or electric shock. For many people, it does not respond well to common treatments. Study procedure. Participants (P1-P4) were randomly assigned to one of four baseline durations (7, 10, 14, and 17 days). (CREDIT: …

Anna Maxwell Martin reveals why she couldn’t escape the nerves for new drama Star City

Anna Maxwell Martin reveals why she couldn’t escape the nerves for new drama Star City

With countless incredible roles already under her belt, you might think an Apple TV+ drama would be a breeze for British acting legend Anna Maxwell Martin – but not so much! The actress, known for starring in the likes of Motherland, Line of Duty, Ludwig, and with an upcoming role in the Heartstopper movie, has admitted that she couldn’t escape the nerves of her new drama, Star City. A spin-off of sci-fi For All Mankind, Star City follows the Soviet perspective of the space race and stars Martin as the brutal Colonel Lyudmilla Raskova, the head of KGB surveillance, alongside Rhys Ifans, who plays the Chief Designer, the enigmatic man behind the entire programme. Chatting at a special screening of Star City in partnership with Radio Times, Martin admitted: “I’m never nervous actually, but I was a bit nervous [for this] because you’re starting a big show with a big streamer, and there’s quite a lot of scrutiny. “Everybody involved in this show is so lovely and supportive and creative and collaborative, but you definitely …

Meghan Markel was a ‘ball of nerves’ during Australia tour says expert | Royal | News

Meghan Markel was a ‘ball of nerves’ during Australia tour says expert | Royal | News

The pair shows hidden signs of nervouness says a body language expert (Image: Getty) Prince Harry and Meghan Markle showed hidden signs of “tension” and “nervousness” as they began their Australian tour this week, according to a body language expert — before settling into the engagements as the days wore on. The Sussexes returned to Australia for the first time since 2018 for a four-day programme of engagements across Melbourne, Canberra and Sydney, attracting significant press attention throughout. Kicking off in Melbourne on Tuesday, the pair visited the Royal Children’s Hospital before making their way to the Australian National Veterans Arts Museum in Southbank, where body language expert and psychic Inbaal Honigman, reportredly identified tell-tale signs of stress in both the Duke and Duchess. Meghan, in particular, appeared to be a “ball of nerves” despite masking her anxiety behind a smile, Honigman is understood to have said. Read more: Meghan Markle demoted to ‘support role’ to Prince Harry on Australia tour Read more: Meghan Markle points out how Australians should address her Meghan ‘hanging on …

Masters rookies embrace nerves, soak in dream debut at Augusta

Masters rookies embrace nerves, soak in dream debut at Augusta

AUGUSTA, Georgia, April 7 : For Masters first-timers, the walk through Augusta National’s gates is equal parts dream fulfilled and test of composure as a new class of players tries to balance awe with the demands of one of golf’s most exacting stages. This year’s tournament includes a strong contingent of debutants who say they are trying not to be overwhelmed by the pressure that comes with playing in one of golf’s most anticipated events. “As a kid, it was a dream to just even be out here,” said Ben Griffin, who captured all three of his wins on the PGA Tour last year. “As a player, this is a dream come true.” Like many newcomers, Griffin said he was still absorbing the details of a course he had previously known mostly through television highlights and golfing lore. He pointed to Augusta National’s famed Amen Corner as a place where the atmosphere seems to shift. “Once you get to Amen Corner everything kind of gets a bit more peaceful,” he said, even as he noted …

New implant can read leg movement signals from amputated nerves

New implant can read leg movement signals from amputated nerves

When a person loses a leg above the knee, the nerves that once moved that leg don’t simply go quiet. They keep firing. The brain still sends signals down through what remains, still attempts to flex the ankle, extend the knee, curl the toes, even when none of those structures exist anymore. The signals travel to the end of what’s left and stop there, carrying movement instructions that have nowhere to go. For decades, those signals were essentially inaccessible, too faint and too difficult to interpret reliably. Prosthetic legs, unlike their arm counterparts, have largely operated on autopilot, using mechanical systems and built-in sensors to approximate walking without any direct input from the user’s own nervous system. In a study published in Nature Communications, the researchers describe the first successful decoding of leg movement signals recorded directly from the remaining nerves of people with above-knee amputations. Using hair-thin implantable electrodes and an AI system designed to process signals the way biological neurons do, they extracted not just broad movement categories but precise, detailed intentions, including …

Lando Norris on beating his ‘Netflix nerves’ ahead of TV show return

Lando Norris on beating his ‘Netflix nerves’ ahead of TV show return

Lando Norris knows all about life in the fast lane, driving at speeds of more than 200mph and racing against the world’s fastest drivers, but he takes it all in his stride. Then again, he is the Formula One world champion.  Yet there is one aspect of his high-profile Grand Prix career that still tests Lando’s calm self-assurance: seeing himself on screen. “I hate watching myself,” he admits in advance of the latest season of Netflix’s global phenomenon Formula 1: Drive to Survive. “I don’t really watch it.” © Dan MullanLando Norris at a Drivers Press Conference ahead of the F1 Grand Prix of Great Britain at Silverstone Circuit He doesn’t mind the nerves that accompany a race day, saying, “I have confidence in them because it’s my job”, and he is happy to analyse his performance on the track.  However, the “stupid stuff” that might slip out during an interview for the documentary provides a completely different kind of anxiety. “I don’t feel great and I’m not a natural in front of the camera, …

KPop Demon Hunters’ EJAE on “Golden,” Oscars Nerves on Awards Chatter

KPop Demon Hunters’ EJAE on “Golden,” Oscars Nerves on Awards Chatter

For EJAE, the Korean-American singer/songwriter who is the guest on this episode of The Hollywood Reporter’s Awards Chatter podcast, which was recorded in front of film students at Chapman University, 2026 — like 2025 before it — is shaping up to be truly, well, golden. In 2025, “Golden,” the banger tune that she co-wrote for the Netflix animated film KPop Demon Hunters — for which she also provided the singing voice for the character Rumi, one third of the girl group at its center, Huntrix — became a worldwide phenomenon, shooting to No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 and holding that spot for eight weeks. It marked the first time that a K-pop — or Korean popular music — act not associated with BTS had ever topped the Hot 100, and it made Huntrix the first girl group to top it since Destiny’s Child with “Bootylicious” back in 2001. The film, meanwhile, became the most watched original title in Netflix’s history, accumulating more than 500 million views. For the 34-year-old born Eun-jae Kim, things have only …