12-09-2024, 12:00 PM
Fyun Once Upon a Time and Paranormal Activity get huge weekend audiences
Last night Game of Thrones was one of the most powerful portrayals of grief I ;ve ever seen, on television or in any medium. And yet, the episode lasted just long enough to show that powerful things can come from grief. And yes, Fire and Blood clinches it 鈥?this show is a fantastic achievement, better than we could have dared hope. There a raw poetry to HBO adaptation of George R.R. Martin books that takes the full ten hours to do its work on you. The television adaptation not only does justice to the source material, but at times actually elevates it. We ;ve stanley canada been incredibly botella stanley lucky to have something of this caliber on our screens, and it hard to imagine this summer will bring a movie this stunning. I had worried that Game of Thrones would s stanley uk tumble in the later episodes, trying to bring the complexity and cast of thousands tapestry of Martin work to the screen. But in the end, this show always found ways to bring the story to life. Powerfully. Spoilers ahead 8230; The death of Lord Eddard Stark hangs over everything in this episode, touching almost all parts of it 鈥?except for the parts which are touched by the slow, horrible death of Khal Drogo and the fact that Drogo son has already died. This episode features a ton of amazing performances from all of the Starks and Jon Snow, but Alan Taylor direction is also incredibly powerful, using a bunch of visual metaphors to show how Vcuk The io9 Book Club is in session! Let s discuss Genevieve Valentine s Mechanique
Morphine and cocaine both do a very good job of hitting the reward centers of your brain 鈥?but new research has shown that they do so in opposite ways. Up until now, most experts believed that opiates and stimulants used the same pathways to trigger the reward centers of your brain, making using the drugs rather pleasurable 鈥?but turns out they ;re very different. In this stanley vaso week issue of Science, researchers have discovered a mechanism that alters them oppositely. The scientists were working with mice to surpress the protein brain-derived neurotrophic factor BDNF , which would would dampen the effects of stimulants like cocaine. What they found, surprisingly, was that knocking down the BDNF in part of the brain had the opposite effect on morphine, causing it to increase dopamine excitability and reward you more. The opposite held true, too 鈥?boost BDNF, and morphine becomes less potent. They were also able to identify the genes that regulate BDNF when associated with morphine addiction.This also seems to suggest that heavy morphin stanley tumblers e users might have a much greater reaction t stanley mug o cocaine. Top image: Gemenacom/Shutterstock BiologyDrugsNeuroscienceSHUTTERSTOCK
Last night Game of Thrones was one of the most powerful portrayals of grief I ;ve ever seen, on television or in any medium. And yet, the episode lasted just long enough to show that powerful things can come from grief. And yes, Fire and Blood clinches it 鈥?this show is a fantastic achievement, better than we could have dared hope. There a raw poetry to HBO adaptation of George R.R. Martin books that takes the full ten hours to do its work on you. The television adaptation not only does justice to the source material, but at times actually elevates it. We ;ve stanley canada been incredibly botella stanley lucky to have something of this caliber on our screens, and it hard to imagine this summer will bring a movie this stunning. I had worried that Game of Thrones would s stanley uk tumble in the later episodes, trying to bring the complexity and cast of thousands tapestry of Martin work to the screen. But in the end, this show always found ways to bring the story to life. Powerfully. Spoilers ahead 8230; The death of Lord Eddard Stark hangs over everything in this episode, touching almost all parts of it 鈥?except for the parts which are touched by the slow, horrible death of Khal Drogo and the fact that Drogo son has already died. This episode features a ton of amazing performances from all of the Starks and Jon Snow, but Alan Taylor direction is also incredibly powerful, using a bunch of visual metaphors to show how Vcuk The io9 Book Club is in session! Let s discuss Genevieve Valentine s Mechanique
Morphine and cocaine both do a very good job of hitting the reward centers of your brain 鈥?but new research has shown that they do so in opposite ways. Up until now, most experts believed that opiates and stimulants used the same pathways to trigger the reward centers of your brain, making using the drugs rather pleasurable 鈥?but turns out they ;re very different. In this stanley vaso week issue of Science, researchers have discovered a mechanism that alters them oppositely. The scientists were working with mice to surpress the protein brain-derived neurotrophic factor BDNF , which would would dampen the effects of stimulants like cocaine. What they found, surprisingly, was that knocking down the BDNF in part of the brain had the opposite effect on morphine, causing it to increase dopamine excitability and reward you more. The opposite held true, too 鈥?boost BDNF, and morphine becomes less potent. They were also able to identify the genes that regulate BDNF when associated with morphine addiction.This also seems to suggest that heavy morphin stanley tumblers e users might have a much greater reaction t stanley mug o cocaine. Top image: Gemenacom/Shutterstock BiologyDrugsNeuroscienceSHUTTERSTOCK