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Kool-Aid fans can rejoice because Kool-Aid pickles are real. And if you can't buy them, you can at least make them at home. And this Southern favorite is definitely worth adding to your bucket list.
Food poisoning doesn’t just affect your stomach—it rewires your brain. Dive into the neuroscience behind how one bad meal can ...
A Sioux Falls man is facing three charges of rape after the victim reported she was sexually assaulted after drinking what she thought was grape flavored Kool-Aid ...
A new study reveals how a single food poisoning experience creates long-lasting aversive memories in the brain.
Aid… and pickles? Trust me, I was skeptical too. But once I tried these brightly colored, sweet-and-sour Kool-Aid Pickles, I ...
The Odessa American is the leading source of local news, information, entertainment and sports for the Permian Basin.
Scientists discover how the brain learns to avoid food that made you sick Many of us have a vivid memory of a time we got ...
Much like food poisoning, traumatic events are often followed by symptoms after a delay, and yet they still form vivid, persistent memories.
grape Kool-Aid. "It's a better model for how we actually learn," Zimmerman said. "Normally, scientists in the field will use ...
Learn what part of the brain keeps track of food poisoning and why.
Instead of learning through repeated trial and error or experiences, one-shot learning is when a single experience creates a ...
A Princeton study uncovers the brain’s role in forming long-lasting food aversions. When the gut signals sickness, the brain ...