Now the mouse will drive


Every other bandit drives and who can't drive is also known to learn to drive. While in the United States, mice are being trained to drive instead of humans. This does not mean that mice will be recruited in the future, but it was a brain-stage experimental drive in which scientists can find out about the brain's ability of mice.





In America, a scientist has been able to train mice to drive. "Research has helped us not only understand how the rat brain works but also without future brain diseases," says Kelly Lambert, senior author at the University of Richmond, who produced the report, according to the BBC. The drug will also help in finding ways to treat.





I was interested in neuroplasticity (what changes in the brain are involved in responding to a particular condition or challenge) for a long time," kelly Lambert said. "I wanted to know how much difference there is in the response to the specific conditions of the mice that live in the natural environment and in the laboratory," he said. Female scientists and their teams modified the robotic car by putting plastic in it.





Research showed that the so-called natural environment rats performed better than laboratory mice, but their performance was amazing for Lambert. The mice that were researched were collected to analyze the hormones called courtesy-costerone and dehydro-ep androsterone to determine how much pressure they were under and surprisingly the mice who participated in the training were very comfortable.





The mice who drove themselves had a higher dose of D-Hydro-Ep-Androsterone than the mice that were only passengers in the vehicle that the researcher controlled.


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