Dein Suchergebnis zum Thema: Link

A hard last year of life

https://www.mpg.de/20270779/0504-defo-high-care-needs-during-the-last-year-of-life-are-most-common-154642-x

Dying is often associated with extensive health and elderly care. A recent study by Marcus Ebeling from the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research and colleagues in Swenden came to this conclusion through a new way of analyzing data from the Swedish registry of the entire population. The researchers suggest that living longer may also mean spending more time dying.
This allows us to draw a direct link between the different paths to death, age at

Solidarity in the stadium

https://www.mpg.de/18618260/solidarity-in-the-stadium

In large swathes of Germany’s industrial Ruhr Valley region, coal mining is a thing of the past as is true in other European coalfields. But people in the affected regions continue to be hard hit by the associated job losses, as jobs not only secured their livelihoods, but also created a sense of community. At the Max Planck Institute for Human Development Julia Wambach is looking into what replaced worker solidarity and has come across two committed football clubs: FC Schalke 04 and the French club RC Lens.
„, which literally means „to wet the shirt“, i.e., to sweat, and also creates a link

Max-Planck-Weizmann-Postdoc-Programm

https://www.mpg.de/20473379/max-planck-weizmann-postdoc-programm

Die Max-Planck-Gesellschaft (MPG) und das Weizmann Institute of Science (WIS) bieten herausragenden Postdoktorandinnen und Postdoktoranden der Fachrichtungen Physik, Chemie, Mathematik, Informatik und Geowissenschaften eine prestigeträchtige, vierjährige Anstellung in einem einzigartigen Forschungsumfeld an.
Sie können jedem Gutachtenden seinen eigenen Link schicken, mit dem er/ sie auf das

Hungry for rewards – insulin in the midbrain influences eating behaviour

https://www.mpg.de/4338096/insulin_eating_behaviour

Still hungry – or already full? The brain controls eating behaviour and curbs our appetite when the body has consumed enough energy. It obtains its information about the degree of satiety from various messenger substances, of which insulin plays an important role. Scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Neurological Research and the Cluster of Excellence in Cellular Stress Responses in Aging-associated Diseases (CECAD) at the University of Cologne have now discovered that in mice, insulin not only acts as a metabolic signal transmitter in the hypothalamus, a fact that is already known, but also in the dopamine-producing cells of the midbrain. The switching off of the insulin receptors in these neurons causes gluttony and overweight.
A link with the brain’s reward system was also established as the examined neurons