Phototropism, photo by Tangopaso Wie orientieren sich Cyanobakterien im Licht [More]
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Feed SubscriptionImagining the Future Invokes Your Memory
I remember my retirement like it was yesterday. As I recall, I am still working, though not as hard as I did when I was younger
Read More »Eternal Sunshine Drug Makes a Rat Forget Bad Things [Video]
Working at Scientific American , known for its spiffy technical illustrations, I always look for material that can show what an article is trying to tell.
Read More »Ancient Diseases of Human Ancestors
I’ve written before about ancient diseases of the ice age , but this time I’m going even further back in time, to diseases that were present in the first human-like hominids. Although many human infections only developed after human settlements and animal domistication, early human ancestors would still have been fighting off bacteria and other nasty diseases.
Read More »Orangutans Communicate with iPad Autism App
Orangutans at the Jungle Island Zoo in Florida are learning to use IPads to identify object like body parts and food. The hi-tech approach to communication is modelled on a system used successfully with autistic children.
Read More »Nut-Cracking Chimps Demonstrate Cultural Differences
One family generally dines on Chinese takeout while their neighbors eat home-cooked meatloaf. You say potato, I say potahto. And humans aren’t the only primate species with cultural differences: even in the same environment, different groups of chimpanzees use different tools
Read More »Is it worth fighting about what’s taught in high school biology class?
It is probably no surprise to my regular readers that I get a little exercised about the science wars that play out across the U.S. in various school boards and court actions. It’s probably unavoidable, given that I think about science for a living — when you’ve got a horse in the race, you end up spending a lot of time at the track
Read More »Vaccination Campaign Addresses Need for Life-Saving Inoculations in Developing World
EPA Deems Water Safe in Town Made Famous by Fracking
By Timothy Gardner WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. [More]
Read More »Evolution and Climate Change Should Be Taught in Schools, Say States
CREDIT: Martin Cron, via Flikr One day after new test results showed that only 32 percent of U.S.
Read More »Earth-Facing Sunspots Could Erupt This Weekend
Click to see full image, with diameters of Earth and Jupiter for scale. Credit: NASA/SDO Space weather forecasters are keeping a close watch on a large collection of sunspots that could unleash blasts of energy or charged particles toward Earth in the coming days. Sunspot region 1476, the dark patch resembling the Hawaiian Islands in the photo at left, is located near the center of the sun s face as seen from Earth but has yet to act out in any major way.
Read More »Al Jazeera’s Secret Gaddafi Tapes: Dictatorship In The Age Of YouTube
Al Jazeera's news special on wiretaps implicating Gaddafi's inner circle in assassinations and staged funerals for media will be fully integrated with social media. "The Dictator" this is not.
Read More »MIND Reviews: Memoirs of an Addicted Brain
Memoirs of an Addicted Brain: A Neuroscientist Examines His Former Life on Drugs [More]
Read More »Chilean Earthquake Restores Beaches
In 2010, a massive, magnitude-8.8 earthquake struck the south central coast of Chile, rupturing beaches and launching a tsunami that rode inland with devastating effect. In an instant, whole sections of the coastline were transformed, with large swaths of sand and rock lifted from beneath the waves.
Read More »Why Are There No Biological Tests in Psychiatry?
Part 5 of a 5-part series By Allen Frances* [More]
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