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Furthermore, only cold memory, not general memories or memories of a feared stimulus, increased the expression of genes involved in thermogenesis in brown adipose tissue, suggesting that cold ...
A groundbreaking study reveals that recalling cold experiences can activate thermoregulation and metabolism in mice, ...
The study is published in the journal Nature. The discovery may have ... seems to be due to increased activity of brown adipose tissue—or brown fat—which can be controlled by innervations ...
New multidisciplinary research led by Prof. Tomás Ryan from Trinity College Dublin shows that the brain forms memories of cold experiences and uses them to control our metabolism. This newly published ...
Lead author of the article published today in the leading international journal, Nature,, Dr Andrea Muñoz Zamora ... body temperature seems to be due to increased activity of brown adipose tissue – or ...
Lead author of the article published today in the journal, Nature,, Dr Andrea Muñoz ... seems to be due to increased activity of brown adipose tissue -- or brown fat -- which can be controlled ...
The brain remembers ‘cold experiences’ through physical and chemical changes – called engrams – that then tell the body to make more heat.
In a study published in Nature, neuroscientists at Trinity College Dublin and Princeton University revealed that the brain ...