In Chapter 1, editors Barbara Oakley, Ariel Knafo, and Michael McGrath introduce the concept of well-intentioned behaviors that go awry.
In Chapter 1, editors Barbara Oakley, Ariel Knafo, and Michael McGrath introduce the concept of well-intentioned behaviors that go awry.
Neurogastronomy, Why Calories Count, The Kitchen as Laboratory, Fear of Food
Studying the evolution of altruistic behaviors reveals how knee-jerk good intentions can backfire.
Biomarkers of Alzheimer’s disease are ready for widespread use in clinical trials.
Untargeted metabolic profiling implicates a new suite of metabolites that may be involved in nerve damage-induced pain.
Whole brain radiation therapy costs mice some of their cognitive abilities, but treatment with low-oxygen air revives their reasoning skills.
Proteins that appear before patients show symptoms of the disease could offer clues to the disease process.
Examples of parasites that manipulate the behavior of their hosts are not hard to come by, but scientists have only recently begun to understand how they induce such dramatic changes.
The body’s own mechanism for dispersing the inflammatory reaction might lead to new treatments for chronic pain.