The 53rd edition of Encephalon is online now at Ionian Enchantment and includes entries about grid cells, cochlear implants and how culture affects the perception of faces.
The carnival comes back to it's original home for the next edition - I'll be hosting it here on 15th September. If you'd like to contribute, send permalinks to your neuroscience and psychology blog posts to encephalon{dot}host{at}gmail {dot}com.
Also, there's a new blog carnival called Hourglass that you might like to take a look at. It's about biogerontology (the biology of aging), and the first and second editions are at Ouroborous.
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Thanks for the link to Hourglass and Ouroborous. I've had several ancestors live into their nineties and a couple that made it to a hundred. One of my great great great uncles I knew as a child had hid in a root cellar during the American Civil War as the plantation burned down around him.
The old folks I personally knew did the things that researchers are now finding increases life. They exercised, weren't big eaters and stayed mentally active. Most of them lived in isolated rural areas though and weren't very social. When their husbands or wives died they did start to drift a bit into their memories of the old days.
My great granddaddy, who lived to be 93, said the trick was to do everything in moderation, a cigar once a week, a shot of moonshine once a month and no wild women. I'm not sure why he included that last one in his advice to me, since I'm female and hetro. :)
Hmm, that sentence about my uncle is pretty sloppy. What I meant was he was still alive when I was child, not that I knew him when he was a child. I may be at the beginning of my golden years but I'm not old enough to remember the Civil War! lol