Smart Genes? Abstract
A new study sheds light on HOW MEMORY WORKS and raises questions about whether
we should use genetics to make people brainier
BY MICHAEL D. LEMONICK
The small, brown, furry creature inside a cage in Princeton University's molecular-biology
department looks for all the world like an ordinary mouse. It sniffs around,
climbs the bars, burrows into wood shavings on the floor, eats, eliminates,
sleeps. But put the animal through its paces in a testing lab, and it quickly
becomes evident that this mouse is anything but ordinary. One after another,
it knocks off a variety of tasks designed to test a rodent's mental capacities--and
almost invariably learns more quickly, remembers what it learns for a longer
time and adapts to changes in its environment more...