In this episode, we say ‘goodbye’ to a good man, ‘‘hello’ to a new area of neuroscience research and ‘WHAT?!’ to our first guest’s thievery-heavy collider stories. You can watch Dr. Amy Sharma and her merry band of scientists-turned-comedians at Science Jazz Hands! March 23 at 8 PM.

In this episode, we say ‘goodbye’ to a good man, ‘‘hello’ to a new area of neuroscience research and ‘WHAT?!’ to our first guest’s thievery-heavy collider stories. You can watch Dr. Amy Sharma and her merry band of scientists-turned-comedians at Science Jazz Hands! March 23 at 8 PM.

Links

To the best of our abilities, all the work we cite in the show is linked below. Please send any comments, questions, corrections, and/or capybaras to us via Twitter (@MissBehaviorJC).

Buy a ticket to Science Jazz Hands, March 23 at 8 PM! ($1 minimum)Multicentric evidence of emotional impairment in hypertensive heart disease (Yoris et al., 2020)Interoception, emotion and brain: new insights link internal physiology to social behaviour. Commentary on:: “Anterior insular cortex mediates bodily sensibility and social anxiety” by Terasawa et al. (2012) (Garfinkel SN & Critchley, 2013)Anterior insular cortex mediates bodily sensibility and social anxiety (Terasawa et al., 2013)What was all that about alligator genitals? Here’s some much-needed context: Gonadal differentiation in reptiles exhibiting environmental sex determination (Kohno et al., 2014)
(It’s not everyday that you get to use the term ‘reptilian sentinels’…)Here is the C. elegans paper Leah talked about this episode (and thinks about every day): Mating and male pheromone kill Caenorhabditis males through distinct mechanisms (Shi, Runnels, & Murphy, 2017)

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