courtesy of iStockphoto/zanskar Weakening eyesight can be sharpened with lenses, and impaired hearing can be improved with aids. What about a failing sense of smell ? [More]
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Feed SubscriptionHistorian Hunts for Motives Behind Climate Change Doubt-Mongering: A Q&A with Naomi Oreskes
Naomi Oreskes is a science historian, professor at the University of California, San Diego, and co-author (with Erik Conway) of "Merchants of Doubt," a book that examined how a handful of scientists obscure the facts on a range of issues, including tobacco use and climate change.
Read More »About Pepper Spray
One hundred years ago, an American pharmacist named Wilbur Scoville developed a scale to measure the intensity of a pepper s burn. The scale as you can see on the widely used chart to the left puts sweet bell peppers at the zero mark and the blistering habanero at up to 350,000 Scoville Units
Read More »Are We Biologically Inclined to Couple for Life?
Are we biologically inclined to couple for life?
Read More »How Partners Prevent Addiction
Strong interpersonal relationships have been shown to ward off drug addiction, and new clues as to why come from prairie voles--rodents that form long-term, monogamous bonds with their mates. [More]
Read More »Mars Observer Mike Malin Set for 9th Mission to Red Planet
By Eric Hand of Nature magazine It is sometimes said that Mike Malin knows Mars better than anyone else on Earth. [More]
Read More »Current Developments: Innovative Ideas on How to Make Electric Cars Cost-Efficient Take Shape
It's easy to knock electric vehicles (EVs) : It takes too long to recharge the batteries and there are too few places to do it. And besides, who will pay for all the new recharging stations that would be needed if the cars catch on? The International Energy Agency’s most optimistic scenario puts (pdf) plug-in hybrids or EVs at 15 percent of all cars on the road by 2020; other projections predict a mere 3 percent
Read More »Africa Leads Climate Push as Its People Go Hungry
By Katy Migiro NAIROBI (Reuters) - Africa is leading the push for clean energy policy-making as climate change turns millions of its people into "food refugees," the head of the U.N. Environment Program (UNEP) Achim Steiner said. [More]
Read More »Beware Climate Change Risk from A/C, Fridge Gases: U.N.
By David Fogarty SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Soaring use of man-made gases used in refrigerators, airconditioners and fire extinguishers risks speeding up global warming and industry should adopt alternatives, a U.N. report said on Monday
Read More »SFN Neuroblogging: Hypoglycemia and brain function
Today’s is the LAST of the SfN Neuroblogging for this year. It was a great time, with so much awesome science! This one was a little more complicated than the others and needed some more time
Read More »Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade
Thursday, November 24 More than 3 million spectators will line city streets for the parade. | Illustration By Jing Wei Balloons may be just a bunch of hot air, but it takes more than that to keep them afloat when they're giant size
Read More »Oceans Teem With Tiny Plastic Particles
Swirls of trashed plastic litter the seven seas. But it's not the enormous plastic patches that pose the biggest pollution problem
Read More »In the Minds of Others (preview)
We recognize Robert Louis Stevenson’s Long John Silver by his commanding presence, his stoicism and the absence of his left leg, cut off below the hip. Although we think we know the roguish Silver, characters such as he are not of this world, as Stevenson himself admitted in Longman’s Magazine in 1884
Read More »Protein Might Ward Off Afternoon Snooze
The other afternoon I hit a classic mid-afternoon slump. Sleepy and sluggish, I grabbed for a bit of chocolate. But I probably should have had egg whites or maybe a piece of steak
Read More »Glucose Test Swaps Tears For Blood
People with diabetes may have to endure multiple, painful finger sticks every day to get blood samples for testing.
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