HIGHLIGHTS
- who: Cerebral Cortex Communications and colleagues from the of Biology, Faculty of Science, Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Japan have published the Article: Fetal blockade of nicotinic acetylcholine transmission causes autism-like impairment of biological motion preference in the neonatal chick, in the Journal: (JOURNAL)
- what: Sample size was arbitrarily set as n=8 for each group of chemical/dosage, and this study is based on the recordings obtained from 110 eggs in total. The authors started this study by testing chemical agents that effectively suppress the fetal movement at embryonic day 14 (E14), the stage wherein . . .
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