Help researchers better understand influenza, the common cold and stomach flu [More]
Read More »Tag Archives: article
Feed SubscriptionHoopsters Believe In Hot-or-Not Hand
“Three seconds to shoot. It’s Reggie! And it’s Indiana by eight!” Reggie Miller, Michael Jordan, Kobe Bryant
Read More »Graphene Spun into Meter-Long Fibers
By James Mitchell Crow of Nature magazine Nano-sized flakes of graphene oxide can be spun into graphene fibres several metres long, researchers in China have shown. [More]
Read More »Scientific American Defends Marie Curie and Women Scientists in 1911
One of the pleasures of editing a magazine like Scientific American, with its 166-year history as the country’s longest continuously published magazine, is getting a “you are there” view of science as it was whenever I take a spin through our digital archives . The other day, while reading some 100-year-old prose, I was reminded of a famous incident.
Read More »5 Great Reasons to Work on Vacation
Part of the reason we go on vacation is to feel refreshed when we get back, right? That's why the laptop and iPhone come with me
Read More »Bedbugs Get Away with Incest
As if bedbugs weren t gross enough already, entomologists have now found that they get ahead by mating with their own mothers, brothers, sisters and fathers.
Read More »An Introduction to Psych You Up. Literally.
A glimpse of a bookshelf of classics. Credit: Helder de la Rocha, Creative Commons
Read More »Are Psychopaths "Brain Damaged"?
Moods Change in Response to Our Subliminal Goals
It happens to all of us: we suddenly and inexplicably feel cheery or blue, even though our mood was quite different just moments before. Often the culprit is a subliminal cue, or, as psychologists call it, priming. But we do not have to be at the mercy of these unconscious cues.
Read More »Swapping Germs: Should Fecal Transplants Become Routine for Debilitating Diarrhea?
Marion Browning of North Providence, R.I., was at her wit’s end. The 79-year-old retired nurse had suffered from chronic diarrhea for almost a year. It began after doctors prescribed antibiotics to treat her diverticulitis, a painful infection of small pouches in the wall of the colon
Read More »How Seniors Can Get a Cognitive Boost
When you think of old age – of people over the age of 65 years – what immediately comes to mind?
Read More »Kepler Finds Its First Planet in the Habitable Zone
NASA's orbiting Kepler telescope has discovered its first planet in the habitable zone of another star. By "habitable," astronomers mean that a planet could harbor temperatures conducive to liquid water--and maybe life. [More]
Read More »Chimps Experience Synesthetic Sense-Intermingling, Like Humans Do
Chimpanzees meld sounds and colours, associating light objects with high tones and dark objects with deeper tones. [More]
Read More »Egg Timer: Separate Biological Clocks Govern Female Fertility and Life Span
As a biological feat, it was the equivalent of an 80-year-old woman giving birth: Because of a mutation, Coleen Murphy's worms were still fertile and laying eggs right up until the end of their lives. The worms' impressive performance adds weight to the evidence that the biological clock that rules reproduction is separate from the one that grants us the traditional threescore and 10. [More]
Read More »Lab Sabotage: Some Scientists Will Do Anything to Get Ahead
In the world of science, it s publish or perish. Researchers who publish a greater number of papers in high-status journals are more likely then their colleagues to win tenure positions, research grants, and prestigious reputations. The competition is fierce enough to compel some scientists to cheat.
Read More »