Simple membranes could have allowed nutrients to pass into primitive cells
more fromwww.eurekalert.org
AAMAS 2008: Main Track
more fromwww.ifaamas.org
Epigenetic codes in cognition and behaviour. [Behav Brain Res. 2008] - PubMed Result
more fromwww.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Episode 39: Detecting and Avoiding Online Threats | Up Close Podcast
podcast- Chris L - DOS attacks
more fromupclose.unimelb.edu.au
Cancer stem cells created from skin cells in lab
researchers at the School of Medicine have turned normal skin cells into cancer stem cells, a step that will make these naturally rare cells easier to study.
more fromnews-service.stanford.edu
Infected with Insanity: Could Microbes Cause Mental Illness?: Scientific American
Viruses or bacteria may be at the root of schizophrenia and other disorders
more fromwww.sciam.com
The Scientist : NewsBlog : Brain-freeze reveals auditory pathways [13th April 2008 08:25 PM GMT]
The brain's sound processing areas are split into two distinct regions — one which determines what a sound is, the other which tracks where it's coming from, according to research published online today (April 13) in Nature Neuroscience.
more fromwww.the-scientist.com
Liars' Brains Wired Differently
Specifically, liars had a 25.7 percent increase in prefrontal white matter compared to the antisocial controls and a 22 percent increase compared to the normal controls. Liars had a 14.2 percent decrease in prefrontal gray matter compared to normal contro
more fromwww.usc.edu
'Ruthlessness gene' discovered : Nature News
Dictatorial behaviour may be partly genetic, study suggests.
more fromwww.nature.com
BBC NEWS | Health | Daily caffeine 'protects brain'
Coffee may cut the risk of dementia by blocking the damage cholesterol can inflict on the body, research suggests. The drink has already been linked to a lower risk of Alzheimer's Disease...
more fromnews.bbc.co.uk
Notation: * = Private bookmark and comment|… = Clipping [?] | … = Public highlight [?]




