JohnFByers
JohnFByers t1_j1eoxod wrote
Reply to comment by moofthedog in Narcissistic tendencies moderate the association between testosterone levels and generosity in men by chrisdh79
People are amazed at how successful my gifts are!
JohnFByers t1_j1b3qah wrote
Reply to Microplastics deposited on the seafloor have tripled in 20 years, study shows by Additional-Two-7312
Seems like a good investment.
JohnFByers t1_j1abg98 wrote
Reply to comment by wanderinggoat in Mediterranean diet may lower risk of pregnancy complications. Study Shows that those whose diet was highly similar to a Mediterranean diet had 21% lower risk of any adverse pregnancy outcome compared to those whose diet was highly different from a Mediterranean diet. N=10,000 women by MistWeaver80
I was lamenting to Hellenes who may have suffered their wives getting a pang for “gardumba” which is kinda like the Italians call involtini di fraggaglie di agnello — it’s mutton rolled up with offal and liver etc, using intestine as a wrapper and cooked over coals or in an old style baking oven. With potatoes, they love the potatoes.
So imagine she wants that on a Wednesday night and you have to drive out to the coast to the only tavern stupid enough to be open.
Enough to make a man wonder whether having an heir was a good idea.
JohnFByers t1_j1a5ddi wrote
Reply to Mediterranean diet may lower risk of pregnancy complications. Study Shows that those whose diet was highly similar to a Mediterranean diet had 21% lower risk of any adverse pregnancy outcome compared to those whose diet was highly different from a Mediterranean diet. N=10,000 women by MistWeaver80
Άντε τώρα Τετάρτη βράδυ να σου λέει «έχω όρεξη για γαρδούμπα» και να τρέχεις στη Βάρη στα καλά καθούμενα και να αναρωτιέσαι το τον ήθελα τον κληρονόμο.
I suspect non-Med people have a very different idea of what the Med diet actually is though…
JohnFByers t1_j12ecjn wrote
Reply to comment by Skreame in FDA study finds temporal association for pulmonary embolism (PE) following BNT162b2 (Pfizer) vaccination of the elderly (65+). No associations were identified following vaccination with either mRNA-1273 (Moderna) or Ad26 COV2.S (J&J) vaccines. Causation was not established. by glawgii
In other words, yes. The agency supports vaccination because of the benefits outweighing the risks.
JohnFByers t1_j0wmyxm wrote
Reply to Savannah-living chimpanzees suggest human bipedalism evolved in the trees by giuliomagnifico
The hypothesis itself isn’t novel though. It seems bipedalism as a better motion modality in arboreal primates evolved several times; for example it seems to have evolved among primates in Europe too.
JohnFByers t1_j0lw4fa wrote
Reply to Even a single bout of exercise can produce anti-cancer proteins called myokines, which can significantly suppress tumour growth by giuliomagnifico
Conversely, doesn’t exercise activate mTOR-mediated signalling?
JohnFByers t1_j054r9e wrote
JohnFByers t1_j04wzht wrote
Reply to comment by WindowShoppingMyLife in A Mediterranean diet not only boosts health, but also improves fertility. The Mediterranean diet can improve fertility, assisted reproductive technology (ART) success, and sperm quality in men. by MistWeaver80
That was late 90s. Beer and spaghetti were both on the McD menu in 1999. Good times.
JohnFByers t1_j04mg3t wrote
Reply to comment by Skeptix_907 in A Mediterranean diet not only boosts health, but also improves fertility. The Mediterranean diet can improve fertility, assisted reproductive technology (ART) success, and sperm quality in men. by MistWeaver80
That’s a relief. I worried it was something I’d said.
JohnFByers t1_j04fqc9 wrote
Reply to A Mediterranean diet not only boosts health, but also improves fertility. The Mediterranean diet can improve fertility, assisted reproductive technology (ART) success, and sperm quality in men. by MistWeaver80
Ironically the Med has been experiencing low birth rates since the 1980s.
JohnFByers t1_ivbdi45 wrote
Reply to comment by irrelevantastic in Private Interests and the Start of Fluoride-Supplemented High-Carbohydrate Nutritional Guidelines — Internal documents show that private interests motivated the events which led these expert panels to engage in pivotal scientific reversals. by Meatrition
It seems intuitive certainly.
JohnFByers t1_ivaya74 wrote
Reply to comment by irrelevantastic in Private Interests and the Start of Fluoride-Supplemented High-Carbohydrate Nutritional Guidelines — Internal documents show that private interests motivated the events which led these expert panels to engage in pivotal scientific reversals. by Meatrition
In those animals, which diet promoted carries?
JohnFByers t1_iu7ea9q wrote
Reply to A review concluded that "research suggests that CBD has promising biological properties for applications in dentistry." by OregonTripleBeam
The problem still remains: it just doesn’t get you high.
JohnFByers t1_it1kqlg wrote
Reply to comment by eniteris in Novel multicellular prokaryote discovered next to an underground stream by eniteris
Temporal and spatial regulation of gene expression that generates cell lineages comprising interdependent cells with a common genome. Among the metazoans, Porifera have a totipotent and rudimentary stem cell system that still provides mechanisms of development and differentiation. Transdifferentiation remains differentiation and I just see it as the basis of cellular plasticity.
Having dabbled in PDZ domains (before they were named PDZ domains and we just called them discs-large-like domains), I was pleasantly surprised to see recently the discovery of essentially intact post-synaptic density components in a multicellular eukaryote lacking a nervous system — the signalling and scaffolding components were there nonetheless.
Granted, other mechanisms of cell signalling exist that do not rely on animal-style junctions. But the other criteria remain challenging. If we do impose a common genome limitation, which I am convinced is appropriate, then prokaryotes with their relatively widespread propensity toward lateral gene transfer will be even more challenging to accept as anything beyond colonial.
JohnFByers t1_it1foiy wrote
Reply to comment by eniteris in Novel multicellular prokaryote discovered next to an underground stream by eniteris
This remains a unicellular prokaryote capable of colonial formations. It may provide indications about a potential evolutionary path toward multicellularity, but I don’t see any data that it has achieved multicellularity.
JohnFByers t1_it022io wrote
Filamentous colonies and biofilms are not novel.
This is not a multicellular species.
JohnFByers t1_is4ha6f wrote
Reply to People systematically underestimate how positively recipients will respond to social support, study finds by nikan69
People also underestimate the prevalence of reposts.
JohnFByers t1_ir9qx7w wrote
This has been going on for 2 billion years and the existence of gene transfer from mt to nucleus isn’t the point of the article.
Since we’re talking about a process that has lasted billions of years, there’s no particular worry at this point.
JohnFByers t1_j1f2aw2 wrote
Reply to comment by ramtax666 in A complex cytoskeleton, previously only observed in eukaryotic cells, is now found in a new species of archaea from the Asgard group, supporting the theory that eukaryotes evolved from Asgard archaea by vtj
You mean domains? No we are at 3 + 1, with Parakaryon remaining unique and uncharacterised.