Fingerprints are so familiar that they are mostly taken for granted. Except, however, for people who don't have any at all.
Read More »Category Archives: Personal Development News
Feed SubscriptionPickup Soccer Helps Homeless Health
It sounds either really crazy, or kind of obvious. But according to new research, pick-up soccer could help homeless men avert the risk of an early death. Homeless people are known to have poor health and life expectancy.
Read More »U.S. Neighborhoods Struggle with Health Threats from Traffic Pollution
LONG BEACH, Calif.
Read More »Heliophysicists Hope Giant Sun-Gazing Telescope Will Get Green Light
By Eric Hand of Nature magazine Close and bright though it is, the Sun still defies a thorough understanding. [More]
Read More »How Our Brains Turn Women Into Objects
Recent reports of a mountain lion or cougar stalking the campus of the University of Iowa prompted campus jokesters to tweet their surprise that Michelle Bachman was in town. A cougar, colloquially, is an attractive older woman who seeks out trysts with younger men, and to some, it seems that Bachmann fits the bill.
Read More »Jaguars Cling to Survival in Argentina’s Forests
By Kylie Stott PUERTO IGUAZU, Argentina - The musty jaguar pelts on display at a government office in Buenos Aires are a grim reminder of the big cat's precarious existence in Argentina's northern forests. [More]
Read More »I Was a Teenage Element Hoarder
Credit: IStockphoto I knew I wasn’t like the other kids. Oh sure, I collected baseball cards and model airplanes, but not with the passion that I saved for my real obsession--collecting each and every element of the periodic table .
Read More »Gig.U Is Now in Session
The U.S. notoriously lags other countries when it comes to Internet speed. One recent report from Web analyst Akamai Technologies puts us in 14th place, far behind front-runner South Korea and also trailing Hong Kong, Japan and Romania, among other countries.
Read More »Toxins All around Us
Susan starts her day by jogging to the edge of town, cutting back through a cornfield for an herbal tea at the downtown Starbucks and heading home for a shower. It sounds like a healthy morning routine, but Susan is in fact exposing herself to a rogue’s gallery of chemicals: pesticides and herbicides on the corn, plasticizers in her tea cup, and the wide array of ingredients used to perfume her soap and enhance the performance of her shampoo and moisturizer. Most of these exposures are so low as to be considered trivial, but they are not trivial at all--especially considering that Susan is six weeks pregnant.
Read More »Hesitant Speech Helps Kids, Um, Learn
Parents never want their tots to learn to fumble over words, but they need not worry about their own “uhs” and “ums”--
Read More »How an Interconnected Planet Is Fueling the Brewing Viral Storm
Editor's Note: The following is an excerpt from a chapter in Nathan Wolfe's new book: The Viral Storm: The Dawn of a New Pandemic Age (published October 11 by Times Books, an imprint of Henry Holt and Company, LLC. Copyright
Read More »Framing and definitions: are you maternal enough to be a woman?
In high school, my mother occasionally found babysitting jobs for me. Parents, desperate for a trustworthy kid to watch their own, would entrust their offspring to Katie the honors student while they went to a meeting, or to work, or perhaps on a date. If any of those parents are reading, I have a confession for you: I didn't like watching your kids
Read More »The more feminine you look, the more children you want. It must be science.
Friend of the blog Cackle of Rad was the first person to send me this paper, and when I first tried to read it, I got…pretty angry.
Read More »How Open Data Could Make San Francisco Public Transportation Better
By Ariel Schwartz Instead of relying on almost-never-correct schedules, Kicker Studio has come up with an innovative system to use the city's data streams to give up-to-date transit information. When can we start using it
Read More »Buried Antarctic Lake Could Hold Vital Climate Clues
By Nina Chestney LONDON (Reuters) - An ancient lake hidden deep beneath West Antarctica's Ice Sheet may reveal vital clues about climate change and future sea level rises, and uncover new forms of life, according to a group of UK engineers and scientist. [More]
Read More »