'Sunny' moods, dermatitis, and genetic motivation
28 June, 2013 | Claire Scott |
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Go for a run or slouch on the couch? Our willingness to exercise could be partially genetically determined. – https://t.co/Bt92YUPBmy
— F1000Prime (@F1000) June 24, 2013
A sunny disposition? Neurotransmitters are shown to 'switch' under light exposure, resulting in a change of mood. – https://t.co/FLgSeJ9A4m
— F1000Prime (@F1000) June 25, 2013
Allergic to work: dermatitis rates in children correlate with whether the mother worked during pregnancy. – https://t.co/zIxkSkzMnx
— F1000Prime (@F1000) June 27, 2013
And from elsewhere on Twitter…
A female octopus with glowing lipstick. Beakstick. Something. https://t.co/do9uXNiu8m
— Ed Yong (@edyong209) June 24, 2013
Should we study #cancer like we study #ecosystems? https://t.co/CRfvdwNOVX // @SmithsonianMag
— Max Planck Society (@maxplanckpress) June 25, 2013
Here's something we hope you really "like." It's a dune field as seen by @NASA's Odyssey Mars orbiter https://t.co/VRXc4WeR7H
— NASA JPL (@NASAJPL) June 25, 2013
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