The lesser-known brain cells called astrocytes form their own networks in the brain. Credit: Prof. Stephen Waxman, Hank Morgan/Science Photo Library Scientists have discovered that the unsung brain cells called astrocytes form extensive networks in the mouse brain 1 — networks similar in some respects to the brain circuits formed by the more celebrated brain cells called neurons. The researchers compiled a whole-brain, 3D map of astrocyte networks, which the authors say is the first of its kind. It , shows that webs of the cells connect far-flung regions of the brain, allowing the cells to exchange molecules with each other over long distances. The ‘silent’ brain cells that shape our behaviour, memory and health “It’s a secret subway system we didn’t know was there,” says Shane Liddelow, a neuroscientist at NYU Grossman School of Medicine in New York City and a co-author of a paper published today in Nature describing the work.…