Brain In Progress

Seema Mathur

Brain In Progress is a quest to unlock our brain’s potential through the best of Western neuroscience and Eastern healing. Award-winning medical journalist Seema Mathur turns her journey with brain disease into purpose. After surviving multiple brain surgeries and currently living with more than 100 brain lesions, she asks what truly helps the brain heal and thrive — because the brain shapes the human experience. Through conversations with the world’s leading neuroscientists, neurosurgeons, physicians, and integrative experts, Brain In Progress explores topics ranging from neuroplasticity and brain health to medical innovation, meditation, and the science of consciousness. We are on the pulse of what is shaping the future of brain care. This is where science meets soul. New episodes every other Tuesday. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Episodios

  1. Peaceful Brain

    HACE 1 DÍA

    Peaceful Brain

    In this episode of Brain In Progress, medical journalist Seema Mathur explores the powerful intersection of music, emotion, and neuroscience with composer Yuval Ron—whose work spans film, world music, and sound-based approaches to healing. From the way a film score can instantly create suspense… to deeply personal experiences of recovery after brain surgery, this conversation asks a compelling question: can sound help optimize brain health? Yuval shares how his journey—from creating music to create political harmony in the Middle East to composing for personal wellness— which led him to explore emerging research on sound and the brain, including studies from Massachusetts Institute of Technology investigating 40 Hz stimulation and its potential impact on brain health. Blending science, storytelling, and lived experience, this episode looks at how music may influence the brain—not just emotionally, but biologically—and what that could mean for focus, memory, and overall well-being. IN THIS EPISODE: How music shapes emotion—and why your brain reacts instantly to soundSeema’s personal story: using music during recovery from brain surgeryThe concept of brainwave synchronization—and how the brain responds to rhythmWhat 40 Hz stimulation is, and what early research (primarily in animal studies) suggestsHow Yuval translates scientific concepts into layered musical compositionsThe role of culture, sound, and music in healing and human connectionThe difference between listening to music—and actively making it—for brain health Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    28 min
  2. A Stroke of Fortune

    10 MAR

    A Stroke of Fortune

    Seema Mathur sits down with Dr. S. Thomas Carmichael—neuroscientist, neurologist and Chair of Neurology at UCLA—to explore a question that could change stroke recovery: What if a pill could help repair the brain? Stroke is a leading cause of adult disability, and even with intense therapy, many people never fully regain movement—especially in the arm and hand. Dr. Carmichael explains neuroplasticity and the brain’s “sensitive period” after stroke, when the brain is most open to rewiring. He then shares the science behind a surprising target: a receptor called CCR5, which becomes highly active after stroke and can lock down the brain’s ability to form new connections. His team is studying whether blocking CCR5—using a drug originally developed for HIV—could help “reopen” plasticity and strengthen recovery. Seema also reflects on her own experience with neuroplasticity and what it means to fight your way back—one repetition at a time. In this episode: Why stroke recovery is often limited—even with rehabWhat neuroplasticity really is (and what it isn’t)The brain’s post-stroke “sensitive period” and the window of opportunityCCR5: the molecule that may limit recovery by locking down connectionsWhy an FDA-approved HIV drug is now in clinical trial for stroke rehabilitationWhat researchers hope to improve most: meaningful arm and hand functionIf the treatment could be extended to multiple variations of traumatic brain injury Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    25 min

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Brain In Progress is a quest to unlock our brain’s potential through the best of Western neuroscience and Eastern healing. Award-winning medical journalist Seema Mathur turns her journey with brain disease into purpose. After surviving multiple brain surgeries and currently living with more than 100 brain lesions, she asks what truly helps the brain heal and thrive — because the brain shapes the human experience. Through conversations with the world’s leading neuroscientists, neurosurgeons, physicians, and integrative experts, Brain In Progress explores topics ranging from neuroplasticity and brain health to medical innovation, meditation, and the science of consciousness. We are on the pulse of what is shaping the future of brain care. This is where science meets soul. New episodes every other Tuesday. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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