A high-fat diet may fuel anxiety | ScienceDaily - 0 views
-
The study found that in animals, a high-fat diet disrupts resident gut bacteria, alters behavior and, through a complex pathway connecting the gut to the brain, influences brain chemicals in ways that fuel anxiety.
-
"To think that just a high-fat diet could alter expression of these genes in the brain is extraordinary," said Lowry. "The high-fat group essentially had the molecular signature of a high anxiety state in their brain."
Race car drivers tend to blink at the same places in each lap - 2 views
-
The world goes dark for about one-fifth of a second every time you blink, a fraction of an instant that’s hardly noticeable to most people. But for a Formula One race car driver traveling up to 354 kilometers per hour, that one-fifth means almost 20 meters of lost vision
-
People are often thought to blink at random intervals, but researchers found that wasn’t the case for three Formula drivers.
-
the drivers tended to blink at the same parts of the course during each lap, cognitive neuroscientist Ryota Nishizono and colleagues report in the May 19 iScience
-
Interesting. So, do we do the same thing while driving around town? Could you design a method to record eye blinks as people drive known routes around town? We could simultaneously use the Arduino Science Journal app on the iPhone to also correlate physical data in a moving car like acceleration/deceleration, motion in X, Y, Z directions, etc. I wonder if we could find a correlation in everyday driving that could help from a safety perspective?
-
- ...5 more annotations...
Science: Crayfish Can Be Calmed With Anti-Anxiety Medication | American Association for... - 0 views
-
"There have been very few studies of the crayfish brain,"
-
crayfish normally prefer darkness,
-
non-shocked, non-stressed crayfish did.
- ...1 more annotation...
Frontiers | Overview of Carbon Capture Technology: Microalgal Biorefinery Concept and S... - 2 views
-
The impending danger of climate change and pollution can now be seen on the world panorama. The concentration of CO2, the most important Green House Gas (GHG), has reached to formidable levels.
-
(iii) microalgae cultivation
-
Furthermore, microalgae can be fed with notorious waste gasses such as CO2 and NOx, SOx from flue gas, inorganic and organic carbon, N, P and other pollutants from agricultural, industrial and sewage wastewater sources so as to provide us with opportunities to transform them into bioenergy, valuable products and forms that cause least harm to the environment
-
OK, so... you could likely create a biofuel from algae produced via the insertion of CO2 into a bioreactor system (perhaps even test the one you have vs. a creation fo your own to maximize growth with a more powerful set of lights and extensive tubing). Right off the top of my head, I know we can easily access commercial CO2 canisters that are used in aquarium setups to boost plant growth. Fluval makes such canisters. You would have to find out the volume/mass of CO2 contained in one. You'd have to be less concerned with toxins of you are able to choose a different algae for this capture vs. the rather toxic species you worked with last year.
-
- ...30 more annotations...
Are plants intelligent? It depends on the definition | ScienceDaily - 1 views
-
When leaf beetle larvae eat goldenrod leaves, the plant emits a chemical that informs the insect that the plant is damaged and is a poor source of food. These airborne chemicals, called volatile organic compounds (VOCs), are also picked up by neighboring goldenrod plants, prompting them to produce their own defenses against the beetle larvae. In this way, goldenrod move herbivores on to neighbors, and distribute damage.
-
start producing defensive compounds that help the plants fight off insect pests.
-
When no neighbors are present, the plants don't resort to accelerated growth when eaten and the chemical responses to herbivores are markedly different, though they still tolerate quite high amounts of herbivory.
- ...5 more annotations...
Odors are encoded in rings in the brain of migratory locusts | ScienceDaily - 0 views
-
However, this coding mechanism is not necessarily transferable to other locust species.
1 - 11 of 11
Showing 20▼ items per page