There are surprising similarities between how monkeys and humans imbibe. Jan. 21, 2011— -- The physiological and genetic similarities between humans and monkeys make the hairier primates a great ...
New research using rhesus monkeys suggests that the brain’s relationship with alcohol may begin forming long before a person ...
Picture this: you are on an expansive white sand beach, drowsing in the sun, listening to the surf and the calls of seabirds. You sip your drink, set it aside, and tip your beach chair back a bit ...
A chimpanzee eating figs at Ngogo in Uganda's Kibale National Park in 2018. (Aleksey Maro/UC Berkeley) (CN) — By eating fermented fruit, wild chimpanzees may be regularly consuming the equivalent of ...
New in JNeurosci, Mary Schneider and Alexander Converse, from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, led an interdisciplinary ...
Techno-Science.net on MSN
Even before birth, your brain can be programmed for alcohol
How can events that occurred before our birth shape our behaviors decades later? Recent research explores this link between ...
Alcohol exposure before birth may quietly set the brain on a path toward risky drinking decades later.
A 20-year–long rhesus monkey study suggests that prenatal alcohol exposure changes aspects of dopamine systems in offspring that influence how quickly they drink alcohol in adulthood.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results