‘Erasing’ drug-associated memories may stop drug addiction relapses
12 August 2008"Erasing" drug-associated memories may prevent recovering drug abusers from relapsing, researchers at the University of Cambridge have discovered.
Research
"Erasing" drug-associated memories may prevent recovering drug abusers from relapsing, researchers at the University of Cambridge have discovered.
Support for gender equality in Britain and the US appears to have peaked and could now be going into decline, research at Cambridge University has...
University of Cambridge to pioneer drug development by academic incubators.
A test to show whether a person may be genetically predisposed to suffer one of the most prevalent forms of blindness in the elderly -...
Academics and industry collaborate to deliver a partnership-based forum for sharing and researching best practice.
The rapid spread of tuberculosis in eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union has been fuelled by the economic policies of the International Monetary Fund...
A new centre on the Cambridge Biomedical Campus next to Addenbrooke's Hospital will address the growing threat to public health posed by obesity, diabetes and related diseases.
Six Cambridge academics have been made Fellows of the British Academy in the latest round of elections to the prestigious organisation for scholars in the...
Scientists at the University of Cambridge have identified a key component to unravelling the mystery of room temperature super-conductivity, according to a paper recently published...
Cambridge researchers have discovered that measuring activity in a region of the brain could help to identify people at risk of developing obsessive compulsive disorder...