Stem cells, saccharin and hide-and-seek
5 September, 2014 | Samuel Winthrop |
|
|
Viral hide and seek: identifying rare bacterial-viral host-phage pairs is much simpler using microarray. https://t.co/dke7tCYzoQ
— F1000Prime (@F1000) September 4, 2014
The lesser of two evils: rats prefer saccharin to cocaine as a reward during the early stages of drug use. https://t.co/23Lsw5oana
— F1000Prime (@F1000) September 3, 2014
Re-connecting the dots: a step closer to stem cell therapies for spinal cord injury? https://t.co/h4iqZaSE14
— F1000Prime (@F1000) September 2, 2014
And elsewhere on Twitter…
.@PLOSMedicine's @GinnyBarbour on newly-formed #ebola research collection drawn from all @PLOS journals #OpenAccess https://t.co/rBNho7pAdv
— PLOS (@PLOS) September 5, 2014
Awkward baby birds hint at origin of flight https://t.co/d1uILb8n0P #birds #evolution #ornithology pic.twitter.com/uHNHZdYM3e
— GrrlScientist (@GrrlScientist) September 5, 2014
Where is the brain in the Human Brain Project? https://t.co/XHBwd1dvqE pic.twitter.com/rTRFOOslZR
— Mo Costandi (@mocost) September 5, 2014
|