Scicurious

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  • October 25, 2010
  • 12:35 AM
  • 1,351 views

Fat rat fathers and pre-diabetic daughters

by Scicurious in Neurotic Physiology

You guys, there is SO much science out there. SO MUCH. Grrl and I agree, so much to blog, so little time. Anyway, I found this great paper in the latest Table of Contents for Nature, and went “ooooh, must blog!” And then SciAm beat me to it. No fair, I bet they had it [...]... Read more »

  • July 13, 2011
  • 07:59 AM
  • 1,334 views

The Opposite Side of Dopamine: The D2 Receptor

by Scicurious in Neurotic Physiology

When most people think of dopamine, they think of things that can get you high. Things that feel good. Cocaine. Sex. Food. We imagine floods of dopamine in our brains as the pleasurable feelings take hold. As more and more media outlets cover neuroscience, we get the idea that serotonin means happiness, but dopamine means...pleasure. [...]... Read more »

  • March 23, 2011
  • 09:22 AM
  • 1,291 views

Where is your antidepressant working? Depends on which kind you try.

by Scicurious in Neurotic Physiology

One of the hardest parts about treating psychiatric illness is deciding which drug to use. Hopefully most doctors are not too swayed by the Paxil pens or Prozac magnets that end up in their offices (though that’s a great way to get those names to the top of the recall list), but often, no matter [...]... Read more »

  • July 22, 2011
  • 08:27 AM
  • 1,252 views

Friday Weird Science: The Lion Eats Tonight

by Scicurious in Neurotic Physiology

A weemahway, A weemahway... You think too hard about this paper, you'll get this song in your head for the next few days. Don't say I didn't warn you. Humans. We have a lot of fears, many of them somewhat justified. Heights, spiders, the scream mask. The dark. In Westernized countries a lot of these [...]... Read more »

  • April 12, 2011
  • 09:32 AM
  • 1,249 views

Experimental Biology Blogging: Speeding Healing in the Eye with CAP37

by Scicurious in Neurotic Physiology

I'm sure many of you are probably reading this while wearing some kind of corrective lenses. Some of you might be wearing some cool hipster glasses, but many of you are probably wearing contacts. And as you might know, wearing contacts can be a dangerous sport. Putting them in incorrectly can cause you to damage [...]... Read more »

  • June 29, 2011
  • 01:31 AM
  • 1,198 views

REPOST: Dopamine and Reward Prediction, or your brain on Rickroll

by Scicurious in Neurotic Physiology

Today Sci is going to blog a paper that she has been meaning to blog for a long time. It's one of those papers that people who do certain kinds of science snuggle with when they go to sleep at night. (Sci and this paper) But the real reason that Sci loves this paper is [...]... Read more »

  • April 6, 2011
  • 01:12 AM
  • 1,074 views

If Stress is Getting you Down, you can blame your BDNF

by Scicurious in Neurotic Physiology

People react to stress in different ways. Some people seem to thrive under a constant deluge of deadlines, and galvanize to action in the face of life stress. In others, stress can be a trigger for psychiatric disorders such as depression, leaving them feeling helpless and causing difficulties in their everyday lives. But each person [...]... Read more »

Taliaz D, Loya A, Gersner R, Haramati S, Chen A, & Zangen A. (2011) Resilience to chronic stress is mediated by hippocampal brain-derived neurotrophic factor. The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience, 31(12), 4475-83. PMID: 21430148  

  • June 3, 2011
  • 09:43 AM
  • 1,074 views

Friday Weird Science: Forget cancer, what are cell phones doing to your SPERM!?

by Scicurious in Neurotic Physiology

You know, we keep hearing about things that cell phones may or may not do things. To the bees. To the risks of brain cancer. To your perceptions. To I don't know what. But it's time we focused on the IMPORTANT things, my friends. What does a cell phone do to your SEMEN? I mean, [...]... Read more »

Gutschi T, Mohamad Al-Ali B, Shamloul R, Pummer K, & Trummer H. (2011) Impact of cell phone use on men's semen parameters. Andrologia. PMID: 21486411  

  • February 25, 2011
  • 01:19 AM
  • 1,057 views

Friday Weird Science: Killin’ Prey With My Super Scary…Glue Gun!

by Scicurious in Neurotic Physiology

Today is my second synchro-blogging of the week! When Laelaps showed me the video that went with this paper, and explained the concept…I was HOOKED. We had to blog it. It’s too good. It’s too GROSS. Just you wait.  So we HAVE blogged it, and when you’re done reading this, go over to Laelaps and [...]... Read more »

Haritos, V., Niranjane, A., Weisman, S., Trueman, H., Sriskantha, A., & Sutherland, T. (2010) Harnessing disorder: onychophorans use highly unstructured proteins, not silks, for prey capture. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 277(1698), 3255-3263. DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2010.0604  

  • July 1, 2011
  • 01:44 AM
  • 1,033 views

Friday Weird Science REPOST: Curing your snoring problem with quick and easy digeridoo lessons!

by Scicurious in Neurotic Physiology

Thanks again to NCBI ROFL, who finds these hilarious things and posts their abstracts for all the world to see, and for Sci to giggle over and then run around trying to find hilarious pictures of didgeridoos. So, let's talk about your snoring problem. And then let's talk about your musical stylings on the didgeridoo. [...]... Read more »

  • July 14, 2010
  • 12:53 AM
  • 1,010 views

Aging, Cancer, and p53

by Scicurious in Neurotic Physiology

Sci has recently did a post on p53. She finds it to be a fascinating little guy, and it might just become her new obsession. It appears to be everywhere, the little protein behind the scenes making things happen. (Awww, look at it, all hugging the DNA like that. What a cutie!) And one of [...]... Read more »

  • December 31, 1969
  • 07:32 PM
  • 993 views

Experimental Biology Blogging: To a Bigger Heart and Back Again, characterization of cardiac remodeling in pregnancy.

by Scicurious in Neurotic Physiology

Heart disease is the leading cause of death in the United States for both men and women, but in women in particular the disease often goes undetected. Finding ways to detect symptoms of heart disease in women can help us detect signs and risk factors early and help prevent deaths and increase the quality and [...]... Read more »

van Rooij, E., Sutherland, L., Liu, N., Williams, A., McAnally, J., Gerard, R., Richardson, J., & Olson, E. (2006) A signature pattern of stress-responsive microRNAs that can evoke cardiac hypertrophy and heart failure. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 103(48), 18255-18260. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0608791103  

Malik FI, Hartman JJ, Elias KA, Morgan BP, Rodriguez H, Brejc K, Anderson RL, Sueoka SH, Lee KH, Finer JT.... (2011) Cardiac myosin activation: a potential therapeutic approach for systolic heart failure. Science (New York, N.Y.), 331(6023), 1439-43. PMID: 21415352  

  • December 8, 2010
  • 01:13 AM
  • 983 views

Magnets, Brain “Disruption”, and Math

by Scicurious in Neurotic Physiology

Sci got an email the other day. Ok, I get lots of emails, but this one asked a cool question, which is always nice. All it asked for was an opinion on an article in Scientific American: “Get Better at Math By Disrupting your Brain“. Sci looked. Was intrigued. Read the actual paper…and found the [...]... Read more »

  • May 6, 2011
  • 08:58 AM
  • 922 views

Friday Weird Science: I hope you like your sperm, and your cell phones, "neat"

by Scicurious in Neurotic Physiology

Ok, really today's post isn't about that. But it's definitely the one major thing I took away from this paper. This post is actually about the effects of cell phones on semen. But refer to your semen as "neat" once, and well, it sticks with you. (These scientists like their semen the way they like [...]... Read more »

  • March 14, 2011
  • 08:20 AM
  • 921 views

How long is that word? As long as it needs to be.

by Scicurious in Neurotic Physiology

He studies too much for words of four syllables -Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice “No” “the” “of” “to” “and” “a” “Yes” “How” “LOL” “F**K” What do all of these words have in common? They are all in the 500 most frequently used words in the English language (ok, two of them aren’t, but I bet [...]... Read more »

Piantadosi ST, Tily H, & Gibson E. (2011) From the Cover: Word lengths are optimized for efficient communication. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 108(9), 3526-9. PMID: 21278332  

  • July 29, 2011
  • 12:18 PM
  • 913 views

Friday Weird Science: Knights in Shining Armor, Not as sexy as you might think

by Scicurious in Neurotic Physiology

This new article has gained substantial attention on the interwebs, and who can blame us? After all, knights, shining armor, it's what lots of people like to pretend to be (or pretend to be rescued by, goes both ways). Picture it if you would: a damsel in distress, inches from death in the maw of [...]... Read more »

  • August 13, 2010
  • 12:32 AM
  • 889 views

Friday Weird Science: So, how would you say your poop FEELS today?

by Scicurious in Neurotic Physiology

The following is my entry for the newly created Carnal Carnival, a blog carnival started by Jason (of The Thoughtful Animal and Child’s Play) and our dear blogfather Bora. Sci is a little upset she didn’t think of it first. This will be a carnival covered the weird and odd and, if possible, the completely [...]... Read more »

Müller-Lissner SA, Kaatz V, Brandt W, Keller J, & Layer P. (2005) The perceived effect of various foods and beverages on stool consistency. European journal of gastroenterology , 17(1), 109-12. PMID: 15647650  

  • March 7, 2011
  • 01:33 AM
  • 889 views

Assassins vs Men of Note: the old pseudoscience of phrenology

by Scicurious in Neurotic Physiology

I thought that I had wavy hair Until I shaved. Instead, I find that I have STRAIGHT hair And a very wavy head. -Shel Silverstein The poem above is something I think of whenever I think of phrenology (also it’s just awesome, because Shel Silverstein is always awesome). Phrenology was (and is!) a pseudoscientific practice [...]... Read more »

  • December 1, 2010
  • 09:44 AM
  • 884 views

Reducing stress via brain reward circuitry. Stress, meet pie.

by Scicurious in Neurotic Physiology

Yesterday I was out with my running group, and chatting with an acquaintance.  She was saying that someone at her office had accused her of “eating her feelings” when she was stressed. Her: She accused me of eating my feelings!  I’m kind of upset she would say that…so I had a cookie, and then a [...]... Read more »

Ulrich-Lai YM, Christiansen AM, Ostrander MM, Jones AA, Jones KR, Choi DC, Krause EG, Evanson NK, Furay AR, Davis JF.... (2010) Pleasurable behaviors reduce stress via brain reward pathways. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 107(47), 20529-34. PMID: 21059919  

  • May 25, 2011
  • 12:23 AM
  • 871 views

Are Cell Phones Killing the Bees?

by Scicurious in Neurotic Physiology

Sci has been really interested in the latest literature on cell phones. Partially because some of it involves holding a cell phone over a petri dish filled with sperm, I will admit. But it's also just one of those things that really interest people. We're using these super cool little gadgets that can access the [...]... Read more »

Favre. (2010) Mobile phone-induced honeybee worker piping. Apidologie. info:/

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