A new study from the multidisciplinary brain research center at Bar-Ilan University found that jellyfish and sea anemones ...
Sea anemones and jellyfish don’t have brains, but the way their neurons behave during sleep shows some surprising ...
Sleep may have evolved to help reduce DNA damage in nerve cells long before they became centralized in the brain, a study ...
Experts found that these sea creatures sleep for at least 8 hours a day, a duration often considered ideal for human sleep.
Jellyfish and anemones sleep to repair neuronal DNA damage Jellyfish and sea anemones extend sleep when neuronal DNA is ...
A new study from Bar-Ilan University shows that one of sleep's core functions originated hundreds of millions of years ago in ...
Jellyfish and sea anemones exhibit sleep-like states without brains. Scientists say this discovery rewrites evolution’s timeline, showing sleep may predate complex nervous systems entirely.
Humans began sleeping as a way to partly help reduce DNA damage in nerve cells, scientists at Bar-Ilan University in Israel ...
Jellyfish and sea anemones display human-like sleep, supporting theories about sleep’s role in preserving neurons, even ...
“Expression tells us what cells do, but regulatory DNA tells us where they come from, how they develop, and which germ layer ...
With increased DNA damage from UV radiation or other reasons, the researchers also observed the jellyfish and sea anemones ...