Sleep and exercise in humans, and sex-specific behavior in worms: social media roundup
6 November, 2015 | Eva Amsen |
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How much sleep do we really need? Analysis of 3 pre-industrial hunter-gatherer societies may provide some answers https://t.co/BtFweCj56i
— F1000 (@F1000) November 3, 2015
Exercise at a molecular level: human skeletal muscle phosphoproteome reveals an extensive exercise signaling network https://t.co/TeW4DfygQt
— F1000 (@F1000) November 3, 2015
Men are from mars & women from venus? Two neurons in C elegans tweak the neuro-circuitry for sex-specific behavior. https://t.co/bqCWlKoEC7
— F1000 (@F1000) November 2, 2015
And elsewhere on Twitter…
Fascinating case of human disease caused by parasite-derived cancer cells – great video animation by @nejm https://t.co/I1atqpgrEk
— Angie Pinto (@DrAngiePinto) November 6, 2015
Immunotherapy drugs are incredible, but only some cancer patients respond. Perhaps because of their gut microbes? https://t.co/zCYutRq0SM
— Ed Yong (@edyong209) November 6, 2015
How to make the perfect grilled cheese sandwich, using science https://t.co/ozKjiPu47b
— The Independent (@Independent) November 6, 2015
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