Hormones, gender and mapping research
30 November, 2012 | Samuel Winthrop |
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Feed me! Ghrelin injected into rat brain structures induces overeating, but has no impact on food enjoyment. ow.ly/fzpjv
— Faculty of 1000 (@F1000) November 26, 2012
It’s a hormone thing – are we all essentially bisexual until those gender-specific chemicals kick-in? ow.ly/flMOg
— Faculty of 1000 (@F1000) November 23, 2012
A not-so-bumpy ride: orientating ourselves in the mixed methods-mixed research synthesis terrain just got easier. ow.ly/fvlxb
— Faculty of 1000 (@F1000) November 24, 2012
And elsewhere on Twitter…
HuffPo article yesterday: “Doomsday Microbes: Is Some Science Too Dangerous to Permit?” @rockefelleruniv huffingtonpost.com/erec-stebbins/…
— Erec Stebbins (@erecstebbins) November 30, 2012
With DNA, we can make self-assembling sculptures that are smaller than many viruses blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscien…
— Ed Yong(@edyong209) November 30, 2012
Drug repositioning worked in Alzheimer’s for Manchester colleague Andrew Doig – guardian.co.uk/business/2012/…
— Andreas Prokop (@Poppi62) November 30, 2012
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