Ad on a London Bus. Courtesy of Annie Wade via Flickr. People have long tried tricks to aid their memories
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Feed SubscriptionMemory in the Brain [Interactive]
Although most people think of memory as a vault for storing information, it is more like a seamstress who stitches together logical threads into scenes that make sense.
Read More »Forgetting is Key to a Healthy Mind (preview)
Solomon Shereshevsky could recite entire speeches, word for word, after hearing them once. In minutes, he memorized complex math formulas, passages in foreign languages and tables consisting of 50 numbers or nonsense syllables
Read More »Time to Forget
I sat at a piano in a sun-filled modern church. The audience--other young pianists and their parents--watched as I played the first eight notes of a piece by composer Edvard Grieg. At the ninth note, I froze
Read More »The Surprising Subject of the First Book of Photographs
In these hyperlinked days, one might reasonably guess that the subject of the first book of photographs may have been along the lines of the True Purpose of the Internet (ask someone who’s seen “Avenue Q” if you don’t know). Or if not that, perhaps cityscapes, or naval vessels, or still lifes, or battlefields. But no
Read More »Perceived Gift Values Get Averaged Not Added
You’ve found that perfect, pricey gift for your significant other. Now, you decide to pick up a little something else. But wait! The second smaller gift can actually take away from the powerful impression of gift number 1.
Read More »Was Australopithecus sediba Polygamous? Paleontologist Answers Reader Questions about New Early Human Fossils
Paleontologist Lee Berger displays the skull and partial skeleton of a juvenile male Australopithecus sediba. Photo by Kate Wong During a recent reporting trip to South Africa for a forthcoming feature article on a new fossil human species called A ustralopithecus sediba , I asked readers to submit their questions about this dazzling find. Inquiries about the nearly two-million-year-old hominin–which has been held up as a possible ancestor of our genus, Homo –came in via Twitter, Google Plus and the comments section of this blog.
Read More »Readers Respond to "Bigger Cities Do More with Less" and Other Articles
WHY CITIES SUCCEED [More]
Read More »A real sea change
International diplomats met two weeks ago at the UN Durban Climate Change Conference in South Africa to discuss a greenhouse gas reduction plan displaying no urgency to reach any meaningful agreement. Meanwhile, researchers at the American Geophysical Union annual meeting in San Francisco are reporting what many scientists have suspected for a long time but have been thus far not been able to prove convincingly that the world s sea level is likely to rise by at least 3 feet in the next 100 years
Read More »The Little Engine That Could
For a long time the smallest motor in the world was 200 nanometers across. That’s really small, about one-fortieth the size of a red blood cell. Charles Sykes and his team at Tufts University have now crushed that rec
Read More »New Magnetic Bacteria!
I’ve mentioned magnetic bacteria a couple of times now, so I got quite excited when Lucas Brouwers alerted me to a recent paper in Science (ref below) that explored a whole new group of magnetic bacteria.
Read More »Huge Oilfield Off Coast of Nigeria Shut Down After Leak
LONDON, Dec 21 (Reuters) - Royal Dutch Shell is shutting down its huge 200,000 barrels per day (bpd) Bonga oilfield off the Nigerian coast after a leak occurred while loading a tanker on Tuesday, the firm said in a statement. [More]
Read More »Solar Wind May Explain Planet Mercury’s Puny Magnetic Field
The mystery of why Mercury 's magnetic field is so weak may just have been solved: It is being stifled by the solar wind, researchers think. [More]
Read More »NFL Puts Super Bowl Online
No single event is more important in broadcasting each year than the National Football League's Super Bowl.
Read More »Do You Know What Happens to Your Cellphone When You’re Done with It?
DURBAN, South Africa I rented a cellphone during my sojourn here to cover the recent climate change negotiations . A local number enabled me to keep in touch with home and office but also, perhaps more importantly, to make appointments on the fly with ever harried international negotiators
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