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Feed SubscriptionWhat Processed Food Looks Like during Digestion-Of Course It’s Not Pretty [Video]
If you ever wondered how your body handled all those packaged ramen noodles you ate during college, this video s for you. Stefani Bardin , a TEDxManhattan fellow, wants to learn how digestion differs between food chock full of preservatives and food that can actually go bad in a day. To create this video, she and her collaborator swallowed a camera pill along with their meals (which included Gatorade and Gummi bears)
Read More »Parents play a crucial role in building kids’ interest in science and math
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Read More »Fermilab Set to Reveal "Interesting" Higgs Boson Results
V ANCOUVER Last fall, the Tevatron accelerator at Fermilab in Illinois shut down for good . The long-running accelerator had been eclipsed by the vastly more powerful Large Hadron Collider outside of Geneva, Switzerland, which since 2010 has been generating data at an impressive rate. The move appeared to quash any hopes that Fermilab had of discovering the Higgs boson , the last great known unknown of modern particle physics.
Read More »Do Men and Women Have Equal Prospects in Science?
By Natasha Gilbert of Nature magazine Difficulties in hiring and retaining women scientists and engineers are worrying universities. [More]
Read More »Citizen Science Expands Its Horizons
By Katherine Rowland of Nature magazine In the Congo Basin, Bayaka pygmies patrol their forests with handheld tracking devices. [More]
Read More »Eternal Sunshine Drug Points the Way Toward Counteracting the Agony of Chronic Pain
McGill researchers test a rat's pain threshold One of brain researchers’ closest brushes with science fiction in the last 10 years came with the discovery of a chemical that could completely wipe out memory, a molecule that evoked a real-life version of the scenario depicted in the film Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind , in which a couple undertakes a procedure to erase their memory of each other when the relationship falls apart. [More]
Read More »Climate Change Increases Mate-Swapping in Birds
Apparently, humans aren't the only species whose relationships can suffer from stress.
Read More »Contagious Cancer: Genome Study Reveals How Tasmanian Devil Cancer Has Spread
Image courtesy of Save the Tasmanian Devil Program A killer cancer that is threatening to wipe Tasmanian devils off the map for good has been spreading from an original infected female 15 years ago via live cancer cells, according to evidence from genome sequences of the cancer and the animal, published online Thursday in Cell . Finding out how this happened could help save this species from extinction and it could also prepare researchers for the unlikely event that a contagious cancer ever appeared in humans. [More]
Read More »MIND Reviews: The Journal of Best Practices by David Finch
The Journal of Best Practices: A Memoir of Marriage, Asperger Syndrome, and One Man’s Quest to Be a Better Husband [More]
Read More »Can We Ask Presidential Candidates about Science?
Back in December 2011, The Guardian USA and New York University’s Studio20 (see their Tumblr – note: I am associated with the program ) announced a new joint project – US presidential election 2012: the citizens agenda .
Read More »Poachers Kill 200 Elephants During Six-Week Spree in Cameroon
By Tansa Musa YAOUNDE (Reuters) - Poachers have killed more than 200 elephants in Cameroon in just six weeks, in a "massacre" fuelled by Asian demand for ivory. A local government official said heavily armed poachers from Chad and Sudan had decimated the elephant population of Bouba Ndjida National Park in Cameroon's far north in a dry season killing spree.
Read More »Mimicking Ear Makes Mobile Calls Clear
If you've ever been on the phone in a crowded room…hold on… [More]
Read More »Fruit Flies Take Medicinal Nips
We’re not the only animals that like to knock back the hard stuff. Studies have shown that some mammals seek out food and drink that naturally contains alcohol. And according to new research, fruit flies will purposely hit the bottle: to self-medicate.
Read More »California Seismologist Testifies against Scientists in Italy Quake Manslaughter Trial
The courthouse in L’Aquila, Italy, on February 15 hosted a highly anticipated hearing in the trial of six seismologists and one government official indicted for manslaughter over their reassurances to the public ahead of a deadly earthquake in 2009 (see
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