“ Beware the Jabberwock, my son! The jaws that bite, the claws that catch! [More]
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Feed SubscriptionA Song like Adele’s
Adele’s song Someone Like You has won both a Grammy and lots of lively speculation as to why people feel moved to tears when they hear it. The Wall Street Journal recently ran an article that referenced a study by John Sloboda that found people experienced emotional reactions to music when it contained appoggiaturas, a musical device whose definition seems to be as hotly debated as the science and rationale behind the article itself.
Read More »Paper May Be the Unkindest Cut
It is, of course, the most agonizing injury known. The thought of it makes the strong tremble and the weak pass out
Read More »New Ratings Site Mines Credit Card Data
Amazon, Yelp and similar Web sites rely on customer reviews to help users with their purchases. A nagging concern of shoppers, however, is how reliable these critiques are. [More]
Read More »Teen Brain Takes Biggest Sports Hits
The teenage brain is special. Less plastic than a child's developing brain, but not yet with all of the executive functions of an adult noggin. And that makes them more vulnerable to long-term effects of head injury, according to new research
Read More »A Tour of the U.S.’s Clean Energy Future [Slide Show]
NATIONAL HARBOR, Md.--At least three forms of security depend on inventing a future of cheap, clean energy: national, economic and environmental. President Barack Obama launched the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Energy ( ARPA-E ) in 2009 to fund innovative research in the hopes of delivering such technologies
Read More »Gene Therapy Could Help Corals Survive Climate Change
Editor's note: Climate Query is a semi-weekly feature offered by Daily Climate, presenting short Q&A's with players large and small in the climate arena. Read others in the series at http://wwwp.dailyclimate.org/tdc-newsroom/query/climate-queries . [More]
Read More »Dogma Overturned: Women Can Produce New Eggs [Video]
A study led by Jonathan Tilly of the Massachusetts General Hospital overturns the decades-long idea that women are born with all the eggs they will ever have. It reports that women of reproductive age carry ovarian stem cells, meaning that they can produce new eggs. Tilly’s team, which made a similar finding in mice in 2004 , also discovered that mouse eggs derived from such stem cells can indeed be fertilized.
Read More »How Raindrops Calm the Wind
Rain isn't just a soothing sound. It also helps calm the winds.
Read More »One Scientist s Journey to the Ocean Floor
Name: Jill McDermott [More]
Read More »Dehydration Affects Women’s Moods
Mild dehydration is defined as a 1.5 percent loss in normal water volume in the body. And two recent studies with men and women find that, beyond affecting your body, mild dehydration can impact your mood.
Read More »MIND in Pictures: The Cranial Network
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Read More »bScientists Report Back from Fukushima Exclusion Zone
By Quirin Schiermeier of Nature magazine The tsunami that crippled Japan's Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant almost a year ago was as formidable as initial estimates suggested, according to the first scientific assessment of its impact on the locale. Surveys along 2,000 kilometers of coast have already generated the largest tsunami data set in the world. [More]
Read More »Climate Models Spell Hard Times for Tropical Farmers
When Andy Jarvis wants to explain to locals how future climate change will affect agriculture in the tropics, he uses a familiar landmark: a mountain.
Read More »Deadly Duo: Mixing Alcohol and Prescription Drugs Can Result in Addiction or Accidental Death
The mystery of Whitney Houston's death will not be solved for several weeks, as the Los Angeles County Coroner's Office awaits a full toxicology report. But many experts speculate that the singer's tragic demise involved a deadly cocktail of alcohol and prescription drugs, including Xanax.
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