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search results for `Department of Physiology Development and Neuroscience` |u:www.cam.ac.uk
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Cambridge ReseARch Trail
https://www.cam.ac.uk/stories/cambridge-ar-trail14 Mar 2024: Head towards the Downing Site and to the Department of Social Anthropology to learn more about Dr Kelly Fagan Robinson's work which focuses on the senses, disability, communication and social ... While at the Department of Physiology, Development and
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Genetic mutation in a quarter of all Labradors hard-wires them for…
https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/genetic-mutation-in-a-quarter-of-all-labradors-hard-wires-them-for-obesity6 Mar 2024: of Physiology, Development and Neuroscience who led the study. ... Drugs currently in development for human obesity, underactive sexual desire and certain skin conditions target this brain pathway, so understanding it fully is important.
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The secrets of our brains
https://www.cam.ac.uk/stories/secrets-of-brains13 Jun 2024: After schooling herself on neuroscience textbooks during lockdown, Barsotti made it to Cambridge, where she is currently a Career Development Fellow in the Cardona group at the MRC Laboratory of Molecular ... She is also a Visiting Postdoctoral Research
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Human embryo-like models created from stem cells to understand…
https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/human-embryo-like-models-created-from-stem-cells-to-understand-earliest-stages-of-human-development27 Jun 2023: of the tiny embryo into the mother’s womb,” said Professor Magdalena Zernicka-Goetz in the University of Cambridge’s Department of Physiology, Development and Neuroscience, who led the work. ... Zernicka-Goetz says the while these models can mimic
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Journeys of discovery: Christine Holt on how our brains wire-up
https://www.cam.ac.uk/stories/wiring-the-brain-christine-holt18 Oct 2023: the cells that had been exposed and follow how they rearranged themselves during embryonic development. ... Be a bit foolhardy. Be persistent. Christine Holt is Emerita Professor of Developmental Neuroscience in the Department of Physiology, Development
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Unborn babies use ‘greedy’ gene from dads to ‘remote-control’ mums…
https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/unborn-babies-use-greedy-gene-from-dads-to-remote-control-mums-into-feeding-them-extra-food11 Jul 2023: The findings by researchers from the Centre for Trophoblast Research at Cambridge’s Department of Physiology, Development and Neuroscience and the Medical Research Council Metabolic Diseases Unit, part of the ... Dr Jorge Lopez-Tello, a lead author of
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