All posts tagged: rigid

Soft brain implants outperform rigid silicon in long-term safety study

Soft brain implants outperform rigid silicon in long-term safety study

Brain implants offer incredible promise for treating medical conditions and restoring lost senses, but the rigid materials often used to make them can cause long-term damage to delicate neural tissue. A recent study published in Advanced Science revealed that making these devices out of a soft, flexible plastic rather than stiff silicon drastically reduces scarring and preserves healthy brain cells. These results provide a practical guide for designing the next generation of safer, longer-lasting neural interfaces. For many years, medical engineers have relied on tiny electronic devices to interface with the nervous system. These microelectrode arrays can record electrical signals from brain cells and deliver mild currents to stimulate them. This technology has successfully helped retrieve motor commands for paralyzed patients and could eventually help restore vision to blind individuals. Most commercially available brain implants are made from rigid silicon. Because the brain pulses and shifts slightly inside the skull, a stiff piece of silicon can scrape against the surrounding tissue. This constant rubbing triggers a steady immune response that degrades the local environment. When …

Why procrastination isn’t laziness – it’s rigid thinking that your brain can unlearn

Why procrastination isn’t laziness – it’s rigid thinking that your brain can unlearn

Most of us have experienced it: a deadline approaches, the task is perfectly doable, yet instead of starting, we suddenly feel compelled to tidy a drawer or reorganise the apps on our phone. Procrastination feels irrational from the outside but gripping from the inside. Although it’s often framed as a failure of discipline, research shows it is far more linked to how flexibly (or inflexibly) our brains respond to discomfort and uncertainty. In other words, procrastination isn’t a time-management problem – it’s an emotion-regulation problem. People don’t delay because they lack planning skills; they delay because their brains want to escape a difficult internal state. When I ask students why they procrastinate, their answers are strikingly consistent: “I don’t know where to start”, “I feel lost”, “I get anxious”, “I’m overwhelmed”. Not one says, “I don’t care” – procrastination usually comes from caring too much. Crucially, avoidance prevents the brain from discovering something important: that starting is often rewarding. Even a tiny first step can release dopamine. This helps motivation increase after we begin – …