-
Null result publications decline
As a person who has known first-hand the pain and difficulty of publishing null results, it’s understandable that publications would trend in this way…but when scientists only publish their positive (not positive meaning good but positive meaning they found an effect), it really puts the integrity of science at risk, and it also threatens scientific…
-
Science helps us eat ever more delicious foods
Purdue scientists have developed a new app that translates any foreign menu into English. The science behind it is called “lightweight algorithms” but the important part is that we can now eat ever weirder foods on our overseas adventures and brag about it to our hometown buddies.
-
Neurons respond preferentially to animal pictures
This study was published a super high impact journal – Nature Neuroscience, which hopefully legitimizes all of the hours we at the DiSH Lab spend ogling cute animal pictures.
-
Socially engaging environments turn white fat to brown
In a neat study in mice, researchers found that mice that live in enriched environments with 15-20 other rats and lots of toys change their fat tissue from normal white fat to the calorie-burning brown fat. The researchers aren’t sure why – they say that maybe it’s a little bit of added stress from living…
-
September is National Childhood Obesity Awareness Month
President Obama has declared September 2011 as National Childhood Obesity Awareness Month. He hopes to eradicate childhood obesity within one generation. If this interests you, you might want to check out Michelle Obama’s Let’s Move initiative, focused on physical activity to promote health.
-
It’s time to sign up to work in the DiSH Lab!
The DiSH Lab is now accepting applicants to be part of the DiSH Lab for Fall 2011. Please complete the application, which you can find at the Opportunities page.
-
Study: Overweight and Obese Children Eat Less Than Their Healthy Weight Peers
In a fascinating conference presentation out of UNC Chapel Hill, researchers looked at caloric intake in a nationwide sample of children and adolescents and found that overweight and obese children and teens actually consume FEWER calories than normal weight children. Hopefully this study will help people reconsider whether putting their kid on a diet is…
-
The “Maggie Goes on a Diet” book controversy
A new book called “Maggie Goes on a Diet” is about to be released, and even before it’s out the book is stirring up a lot of controversy. In it, 14-year-old Maggie starts out overweight and unhappy. Then she diets, loses weight and becomes popular. You can find coverage of the controversy and very sound…
-
Our paper on exercise, stress, rumination, and cortisol published
A paper first-authored by DiSH Lab collaborator Eli Puterman was just published in Psychosomatic Medicine – the prestigious journal with the terrible name. We already know that many people, when they’re stressed, tend to ruminate on their negative feelings. This rumination can even affect the body by making it secrete cortisol, a stress hormone. In this…
-
A picture of DiSH Lab member David Lowry’s dog Yoda
We here at the DiSH Lab LOVE ANIMALS. If it were up to us, the DiSH Lab would double as an animal shelter. Since zoning laws make that illegal, we will have to get our kicks from this picture of Yoda:
S | M | T | W | T | F | S |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 |
8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 |
15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 |
22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 |
29 | 30 | 31 |
- Blog by RA (14)
- Collaborator Spotlight (8)
- Eating and Dieting (71)
- Fun (48)
- Grad Student Blog (35)
- Guest Blog (34)
- Lab Stuff (36)
- Policy (11)
- Pop Culture (28)
- Press (33)
- RA News (5)
- Research Findings (150)
- Research that Changed Research (11)
- Stress (22)
- Teaching (3)
- Travel (6)
- Uncategorized (131)