Noisy brains and diagnostic elbows
20 December, 2013 | Samuel Winthrop |
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Why so much Y when we can generate normal mice via assisted reproduction with only two genes from the Y chromosome? https://t.co/4APDTmzaQj
— F1000Prime (@F1000) December 16, 2013
A nudge in the right direction: asking patients if they've been elbowed by their bedfellow helps predict OSA. https://t.co/tauVxnuSw8
— F1000Prime (@F1000) December 18, 2013
Thinking clearly: a mechanism of action for oxytocin may be through cutting out the brain's 'background noise'. https://t.co/dSsC0c1h8v
— F1000Prime (@F1000) December 18, 2013
While on the rest of Twitter…
Online Now: in vivo reprogramming of reactive glial cells into functional neurons; Chen lab https://t.co/fXPGGXGIoK pic.twitter.com/40nQvpt09U
— Cell Stem Cell (@CellStemCell) December 19, 2013
Wow! RT @ChirurgeonsAppr: Ladies & Gentleman: a dissected lego frog. You're welcome: https://t.co/Yp3QGvQugL pic.twitter.com/hhxowXUJQH
— Wellcome Trust (@wellcometrust) December 20, 2013
Beautiful image of the plant Pittosporum Glabratum common to China & known as guang ye hai tong #microscopy #Cytell pic.twitter.com/ROFMhKVvgQ
— GE Cell Biology (@GECellBiology) December 20, 2013
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