Microbial mind control and marks of ill health
17 January, 2014 | Samuel Winthrop |
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A mark of ill health: are vitamin D levels a cause or an effect? A systematic review looks at the evidence. https://t.co/7GybJkHeTM
— F1000Prime (@F1000) January 14, 2014
Cancer patients with a sweet tooth beware; a high-sugar diet may enhance malignant tumour growth. https://t.co/1fOPYBXHjB
— F1000Prime (@F1000) January 16, 2014
Psychobiotics, the mind-controlling microbes: B. fragilis treatment for gut reduces autistic behaviors in mice. https://t.co/VTRz9Jkjg1
— F1000Prime (@F1000) January 17, 2014
While elsewhere on Twitter…
Create a scatterplot with any species as datapoints with just 5 lines of R code https://t.co/lhGA22oAPC pic.twitter.com/qtvOk6qrl9
— Robert Lanfear (@RobLanfear) January 17, 2014
Aerodynamic Characteristics of a Feathered Dinosaur https://t.co/hHEYfAV4np pic.twitter.com/JdpbBGyqjY
— PLOS ONE (@PLOSONE) January 17, 2014
Image of the Day: In the fruit fly brain; neurons that sense taste are labeled in green. #IOD https://t.co/QGDjYSOVvl pic.twitter.com/3GXPd9f4L4
— The Scientist (@TheScientistLLC) January 17, 2014
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