Managing Editor Claudia Wallis introduces the July/August 2015 issue of
ByFrom the moment we emerge into this bright, bustling world, our perceptions and experiences are inscribed on the circuits and structures of our brain. Sights, sounds, tastes, personal encounters of all sorts leave their neural imprint, stamping us as unique individuals. But arguably, it all begins with that most rudimentary of senses: touch.
“Touch is the first sense to emerge in utero, and though far from mature, it is the most strongly developed sense at birth,” writes Brooklyn, N.Y.–based science writer Lydia Denworth in our cover story, “.”
At the other extreme from this primal sensation is a whole new world of stimulation from modern technology. Past stories in have touched on ways that cell phones and television affect cognitive function. In this issue, journalist and former researcher Simon Makin at whether brain-training games—such as those offered by Lumosity—really can improve your thinking and stave off dementia.
Technology also plays a starring role in an extraordinary first-person account by Amanda Boxtel, who tells how, 18 years after becoming paralyzed in a ski accident, she learned to walk again . In a companion article, “,” Ariel Bleicher reports on next-generation exoskeletons that will have brain-machine interfaces to communicate directly with the user's nervous system.
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