Reward behavior, sugar cravings, and jellyfish
16 January, 2015 | Claire Scott |
|
|
Pushing your buttons: neuroepigenetic remodelling can control reward behaviours https://t.co/58yrCjdwnp
— F1000 (@F1000) January 12, 2015
Desserts is stressed spelled backwards… Increased stress levels trigger the need for a sugary treat. https://t.co/zGl8zk3yES
— F1000 (@F1000) January 13, 2015
The rise and rise of the jellyfish: a call to study the fall in fish/rise in jellyfish populations more holistically https://t.co/hHGNeoB6VG
— F1000 (@F1000) January 12, 2015
And elsewhere on Twitter…
Temporary tattoo offers needle-free way to monitor #glucose levels https://t.co/whPWLYBVqC #diabetes
— NatureRevEndocrinol (@NatureRevEndo) January 16, 2015
Bobtail squid live in symbiosis with bioluminescent bacteria
https://t.co/lconL2Oj6g pic.twitter.com/kiTdv94X0c
— UAR: Animal Research (@animalresearch) January 16, 2015
Past experiments recreated: water doesn't just boil at 100°C & chemistry owes a lot to alchemy https://t.co/B9rUniak2C pic.twitter.com/YmpCYZ2AMY
— New Scientist (@newscientist) January 16, 2015
|