For men hunting for a partner, testosterone’s a good thing. It boosts competitive behavior, and increases men's attractiveness to women. But the hormone has its drawbacks
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Feed SubscriptionNew Canadian Hydropower to Pump Electricity to U.S.
In the far northern reaches of Atlantic Canada, energy companies seek to harness untapped river sites with a hydroelectric project that could replace fossil fuel plants and export power into New England. Utility company Nalcor Energy aims to build two hydroelectric sites along the Lower Churchill River in Labrador, downstream from an existing 5,428-megawatt station -- one of the largest in the world.
Read More »How to Improve Your Life with Story Editing
People can change -- but how? This is the central concern of “Redirect,” a new book by Timothy D
Read More »Floods Rattle Pakistan, 300,000 Homeless
* Businesses, schools and most banks closed * Monsoon rains forecast to extend into Wednesday [More]
Read More »Floods Rattle Pakistan, 300,000 Homeless
* Businesses, schools and most banks closed * Monsoon rains forecast to extend into Wednesday [More]
Read More »Texas Wildfires Devastate Last Habitat for Endangered Houston Toad
Devastating fires that swept through eastern Texas this month have left dozens of people dead or missing and destroyed more than 1,500 homes.
Read More »6 Common Misconceptions about the Flu-and Flu Shots
MALTA--Efforts to create a universal flu vaccine, one that would do away with the annual reformulations, is a hot topic these days in the infectious disease community.
Read More »MIND Reviews: Now You See It: How the Brain Science of Attention Will Transform the Way We Live, Work, and Learn
Now You See It: How the Brain Science of Attention Will Transform the Way We Live, Work, and Learn by Cathy N. Davidson
Read More »The Stress of Crowds
Urban life can be trying--cars and buses honk, passersby jostle, concrete and brick win out over grass and trees. Researchers have known for decades that residents of densely populated areas have higher rates of mental illnesses, including anxiety disorders and schizophrenia
Read More »New Results Spotlight Conflicting Findings on Dark Matter
By Ron Cowen of Nature magazine Physicists last week announced evidence that particles of dark matter--the invisible, hypothetical material believed to make up more than 80 percent of the mass of the Universe--may have a lower mass than suspected.
Read More »New Results Spotlight Conflicting Findings on Dark Matter
By Ron Cowen of Nature magazine Physicists last week announced evidence that particles of dark matter--the invisible, hypothetical material believed to make up more than 80 percent of the mass of the Universe--may have a lower mass than suspected. [More]
Read More »UN Might Create Panel to Tackle Global Desertification
By Natasha Gilbert of Nature magazine A desert may need no defining, but desertification is not so easy to pin down. [More]
Read More »Five Factors Cut Diabetes Risk
Diabetes affects more than one in 10 Americans, with the numbers projected to keep climbing. The chronic disease can mean frequent needle jabs to test blood sugar levels--and costly treatments
Read More »Fatherhood Lowers Testosterone, Keeps Dads at Home
Men may not go on a hormonal rollercoaster with their pregnant partners, but once the baby shows up, their bodies biologically transition into "daddy mode," suggests a new study finding that levels of testosterone, the "macho" sex hormone, drop in new fathers. "Men are, to a certain degree, hardwired to take care of their kids," study researcher Lee Gettler, of Northwestern University in Chicago, Illinois, told LiveScience. "This is important because traditional models of human evolution have portrayed women as the gatherers that take care of the kids and stay behind." [More]
Read More »Jellyfish Genes Make Glow-in-the-Dark Cats
First there were glow-in-the-dark fish, then rats, rabbits, insects, even pigs. [More]
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