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Brain selective about retaining key smells out of thousands | TopNews
18 hours ago ago from TopNews | Health News and Updates
Primary links TopNews Health Weight Control Diabetes News Sexual Health Heart Ailments United Kingdom United States Home Brain selective about retaining key smells out of thousands Submitted by Mohit Joshi on Mon, 02/08/2010 - 09:37 Health News Australia Sydney Sydney, Feb 8 - Every single moment the brain is forced to process thousands of separate odours from the world around us. Through a ...
Related content‘Going on a diet can trigger lifetime of overeating’ | TopNews
18 hours ago ago from TopNews | Health News and Updates
Primary links TopNews Health Weight Control Diabetes News Sexual Health Heart Ailments United Kingdom United States Home ‘Going on a diet can trigger lifetime of overeating’ Submitted by Mohit Joshi on Mon, 02/08/2010 - 09:11 health united Kigndom London, Feb 8 : A study has found that going on a diet could trigger a lifetime of overeating and even cause changes to the brain. According ...
Related contentWhy does it seem women like chocolate so much more than men do?
6 hours ago ago from The Why Files | The Science Behind the News
Today's date: 9 February 2010 This Week: Tracking traveling toads In the News: Cal. autism study: Older parents linked to more autism Coming Thursday: Energy and climate: The hidden stories Why does it seem women like chocolate so much more than men do? Chocolate doesn’t just tingle the tongue; it’s a soup of many compounds that affect the brain, including caffeine and theobromines. And it’s true: ...
Related contentSmoking does not prevent Alzheimer''s disease Study
12 hours ago ago from Latest News | Breaking News | Entertainment | Hot News | Sports | Business | Politics | Health | Science | Technology | Buzz7.com
Melbourne, Feb 09 (ANI): Smoking prevents Alzheimer''s disease is a myth, claims a new study. In fact, after reviewing more than 40 research papers published since 1984, experts at the University of California have said that smoking nearly doubles the risk of developing the disease. Professor Jurgen Gotz, from the University of Sydney''s Brain & Mind Research Institute, pointed out that industry-linked studies could have been ...
Related contentThe Neuroeconomics Revolution
2 hours ago ago from The Psy-Fi Blog
A Marriage Made in Heaven or Hell? A recent development in economics sees the combining of neurology, psychology and economics in an attempt to reduce economic behaviour to brain function and to predict market behaviour from observable brain patterns. Its aim is to glue together a subject that can't predict human behaviour from analysis of the brain with a subject that can't predict human behaviour from analysis of people to a subject that ...
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