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... the Urge to Create”) Amazing Bipolar disorder DNA Family Genes Genius Gifted Grief Hardship Heredity Inherited Literature ...
2. IMMMUN chapter 8
(Workshop/Stuff by Members)
... in common; we're the same species. Being black or brown; being male or female; being 15 or 85, being short or tall; these are not the things which set us apart.  We all share human DNA; that ...
3. IMMMUN chapter 4
(Workshop/Stuff by Members)
... discovered. This is new information; a whole new domain of knowledge that will, eventually, become as familiar to anyone who reads as MRI or DNA is now. And we live in promising times, because more and ...
4. IMMMUN chapter 3
(Workshop/Stuff by Members)
... but because nobody knew about DNA or epigenetics back then, Darwin could not work out why or how some of the domestication traits had become heritable. Now we are aware that the lifestyles adopted by (or ...
5. IMMMUN chapter 2
(Workshop/Stuff by Members)
... of the brain are currently 'busy'). Repair programs can run (including DNA repair) and all essential 'housekeeping' maintenance (everything from removing toxins to turning short term memories into long ...
6. IMMMUN Chapter 1
(Workshop/Stuff by Members)
... have, human DNA is human DNA, and since those of us living in the 'standard' western industrial fashion also have all this marvelous extra other stuff at our disposal like antibiotics, space flight, computers, ...
7. Ground Floor
(Workshop/Pillars Of Nobility)
... which was covering another electronic device display. This time, no numbers to type in, a simple drawing representing a right hand. I smiled, wondering to myself: "hey, what if they put some DNA markers ...
8. Subject Index for Archives
(Neurohacking/Resources)
...  genes & DNA DNA RNA      ...
... because they occur in response to environmental signals.[5] Alterations (alternatives) in processes occur when 'junk DNA' is the target for change. Alterations in parts such as new materials, substances, ...
... task, biology makes them. A secondary signal is sent to the 'Genome reference library' (our DNA), whose protective protein reveals and allows copying of the relevant DNA segment, from which RNA starts ...
11. Toxins in food - Aspartame - info 1981-2013
(Neurohacking/Lifestyle & Nutrition)
... that affects protein synthesis; because it affects how the synapses operate in the brain; and because it affects DNA - can affect numerous organs. So you can get a lot of different symptoms that seem unconnected. ...
... underlying neurobiology? The rats they used were a strain called “Long Evans” which are “outbred”, meaning they don’t all having the same DNA (unlike many other strains of ...
13. Emotion - disorders of emotion
(Neurohacking/Theory & Research)
... repressor that binds methylated DNA. Neuronal depolarization leads to the release of MeCP2 along with its repression complex partners, HDAC1 and Sin3a26, 27. Furthermore, chronic social defeat stress in ...
...  If emergence is taking place in the physical brain, and also taking place in intelligence, psychology and mind, at the same time as the physical development of the body, we might expect to look to DNA ...
15. Intermediate Functional Analysis PART TWO
(Neurohacking/Tutorials)
... and the other one helped the murderer, then they all fled taking the body with them. These are the things we know from DNA analysis: The witness and the one who helped the murderer were not of ...
... data tells us that major genome changes take place in response to the pineal gland too. Some expanses of DNA contain the information that generates biologically active molecules, and the levels of these ...
17. Sakiro's Hackipedia Volume 1
(Neurohacking/Resources)
... we do it, or what effect we expect the walk to have. Exercise has been shown to induce positive changes in DNA methylation within adipose tissue and regulate metabolism in both healthy and diseased individuals. ...
18. Memory - memory editing update, 2004-2011
(Neurohacking/Theory & Research)
... CREB can help pinpoint the neurons linked to a particular memory. CREB (CyclicAMP Response Element-Binding) is a cellular transcription factor. It binds to DNA sequences and can increase or decrease transcription ...
... cell also has 'innards'; organelles (organs) including reproductive organs in its nucleus that contain your DNA. If you watch a single brain cell in a test tube full of nutrients (if you haven't got ...
20. Communication 101
(Workshop/Stuff by Members)
... them think they have offended them in some way assume they have been kidnapped get confused move house without telling them ...
21. Physiological methods - Epigenetics - Hacking the genome
(Neurohacking/Methods & Technology)
... out, things we surround ourselves with, and even just by stopping doing some things that were sending the wrong signals.   Changes can be permanent At the back end of the DNA production line ...
22. Introduction to bushcraft
(Homeworld/Bushcraft & Alternative Lifestyles)
... burial mound. Get an ordnance survey map or pull up google earth and have a look at the area you choose. Print out any maps you may need. Decide how long you want to be away, and start considering ...
... the Urge to Create”) Amazing Bipolar disorder DNA Family Genes Genius Gifted Grief Hardship Heredity Inherited Literature ...
24. Epigenetics - Human Epigenome Project
(Neurohacking/Theory & Research)
... Project - a 5-year project to map the sites of DNA methylation throughout the human genome. Citation: Bradbury J (2003) Human Epigenome Project—Up and Running. PLoS Biol 1(3): e82. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.0000082 ...
25. Epigenetics - Exploring the Genome Project
(Neurohacking/Theory & Research)
... in order to produce its observed traits, defined as phenotype (1). More recently, the term has been used to describe heritable changes in genome function that occur without a change in DNA sequence (2). ...
26. Epigenetics - Chromatin and Gene Expression
(Neurohacking/Theory & Research)
... heritable changes in gene function that don't involve changes in DNA sequence. Until recently, studies of heritable traits have focused largely on mutations in DNA. But it's become increasingly clear that ...
27. Methods & Technology Intro - Part II: Technology
(Neurohacking/Methods & Technology)
... than microwaves, longer than infrared—corresponds revealingly with biomolecular vibrations. Non-ionizing radiation does not damage tissues & DNA, unlike X rays. Some frequencies of terahertz ...
... DNA repair, increased sleep, less motion, and increased protection against cell damage). Organisms usually enter this mode in response to extreme heat/cold or starvation and show extraordinary resilience ...
...  Vitamin B12 [cyanocobalamin] Vital for the growth of blood cells in the bone marrow. Essential for a healthy nervous system. Needed for synthesis of DNA. Eliminates toxins.  Where can ...
30. Matrix Theory Background - Herman Epstein Papers 1
(Neurohacking/Theory & Research)
... at all occurs later. But, as far as can be determined, there is a cessation of activity of the enzyme involved in replicating the DNA (DNA polymerase) and an asymptote in total DNA per brain so there is ...
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