Visual overload and suspicious minds
| 6 June, 2014 | Claire Scott |
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We didn't start the fire: nitrogen isotope compositions are used to estimate forest fire ecosystem recovery. https://t.co/2de5pZPSIo
— F1000Prime (@F1000) June 4, 2014
Visual overload: brightly colored, engaging displays in classrooms serve to distract & lessen children's attention. https://t.co/crUu9nx3dh
— F1000Prime (@F1000) June 3, 2014
Suspicious minds? Your hormones might be to blame — study shows that oxytocin promotes group-serving dishonesty. https://t.co/mBLfFFK1vE
— F1000Prime (@F1000) June 3, 2014
And elsewhere on Twitter…
The GIF you most need to see today: a sucker fish doing its thing, lifting rocks https://t.co/WZ40WuS4Z8
— WIRED (@WIRED) June 6, 2014
My commentary on mentorship in Nature Medicine https://t.co/PuDzasWwDN
— Sally Rockey (@RockTalking) June 6, 2014
Will Electric Brain Stimulation Become the New Coffee? https://t.co/F54V9FiZvW pic.twitter.com/xOz16ll7nB
— Kent Gustavson (@drkent) June 6, 2014
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