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Stanford-Sponsored 'Brain Day' Gives Area Middle Schoolers Brainy Insights
January 29, 2004 02:23 PM US Eastern Timezone

STANFORD, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jan. 29, 2004--February in many schools means Black History Month, Heart Month or
cupids visiting with heart-shaped cookies and cards. For Palo Alto middle school students, it's the month when the
brains pay a visit.

Every seventh-grader who has passed through Palo Alto schools in the last 12 years has seen a zoo's worth of brains
with their delicate features and intricate folds, thanks to Brain Day events organized by William Newsome, PhD,
professor of neurobiology at the Stanford School of Medicine, and his fellow neuroscience researchers.

Newsome first toted brains to Palo Alto schools when his kids were students. The program was such a hit that he and
neuroscience graduate students from the medical school now visit all middle schools in the district with their
collection of brains, brain tissue and preserved slices.

Moriah Thomason, a graduate student who coordinates Brain Day activities, said that before the brains appear, the
middle school students review the many roles the brain plays in such areas as emotion, memory, thinking and, of course,
brainstorming.

Once they've thought about what the brain does, students review what happens when the brain fails. "This part becomes
personal sometimes," Thomason said. Many students know people or have family members with brain disturbances such as
degenerative diseases or mood imbalances.

Then the brains themselves appear, followed by the inevitable first question: Did the brain come from a male or a
female? "We have to reassure students that all human brains were donated and that we can't tell sex based on a brain,"
said Thomason. The students then don gloves to learn how differences in animals' lifestyles and behaviors are reflected
in the brains.

For example, Thomason said human brains have large cerebrums for thinking, learning and retaining information, such as
that learned in seventh grade. Likewise, rabbit brains have a well-developed cerebellum compared to other animals for
controlling the complex movements necessary for escaping predators. By viewing brain slices, the students also can see
the regions that fail in such conditions as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases.

Newsome and his colleagues will be visiting Terman Middle School on Feb. 4, 5 and 6; Jordan Middle School on February
10; and Jane Lathrop Stanford Middle School on Feb. 26 and 27.

Stanford University Medical Center integrates research, medical education and patient care at its three institutions --
Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford Hospital & Clinics and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital at Stanford.
For more information, please visit the Web site of the medical center's Office of Communication & Public Affairs at
http://mednews.stanford.edu

NOTE TO MEDIA: If you're interested in attending Brain Day at one of the middle schools, please call Amy Adams to make
arrangements.

Contacts:

Stanford University Medical Center
Amy Adams, 650-723-3900 (Print Media)
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M.A. Malone, 650-723-6912 (Broadcast Media)
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SOURCE: Business Wire (press release)
http://tinyurl.com/2n8s7

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