Nuts, nanobots and hedonistic mice.
16 November, 2012 | Samuel Winthrop |
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Nuts for your nuts: improvements in semen quality linked to more ‘prudent’ diets. ow.ly/faedf
— Faculty of 1000 (@F1000) November 12, 2012
How to stop comfort-eating: the role of insulin in suppressing reward-motivated feeding behavior. ow.ly/faedu
— Faculty of 1000 (@F1000) November 15, 2012
My ally, my enemy: possible toxic side-effects of silver nanoparticles, found in diverse everyday items. ow.ly/faedg
— Faculty of 1000 (@F1000) November 12, 2012
Elsewhere on Twitter, scientists were looking at the development of a blood test for glioblastoma, the chemical origin of monogamy and the NIH’s statement open access.
Blood test ‘finds brain tumours’ bbc.in/Zt3lGu
— BBC Health (@bbchealth) November 12, 2012
Hormone oxytocin may keep men monogamous, study suggests cbsnews.com/8301-204_162-5…
— CBS News Health (@CBSHealth) November 14, 2012
The NIH is adding more teeth to its open access policy (see also the interesting comment) 1.usa.gov/PZbf9a
— michael_nielsen (@michael_nielsen) November 16, 2012
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