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Read More »Is Shift-Worker Diet an Occupational Hazard?
For shift workers, odd hours usually mean strange sleeping habits and unhealthy meals. And now an editorial in the journal Public Library of Science Medicine takes the position that unhealthy eating associated with unusual working hours could be considered a new form of occupational hazard. Because such eating is a risk factor for obesity and diabetes.
Read More »Aging Brains Match Youth in Some Mental Tasks
Since physical abilities decline as people age, many people think the elderly are also less able to perform mental jumping jacks as they age. New research indicates this might not be true with all brain-powered tasks: In some ways the elderly are fit to compete with their younger counterparts. [More]
Read More »How Does Meat in the Diet Take an Environmental Toll?
Dear EarthTalk : I heard that the less meat one eats, the better it is for the environment. How so? [More]
Read More »Tornadoes in 2011 Set Deadly Records
Joplin, Mo., after a severe May 22 tornado Many of us may remember the jaw-dropping images of the May 22, 2011, tornado that tore through Joplin, Mo. , killing 158 people and leaving an incredible 14-mile path of destruction
Read More »Growth of the Alberta tar sands from 1984 to 2011
NASA has posted a series of satellite photos documenting the expansion of the Athabasca tar sands. The Athabasca pits cover over 54,000 square miles in Alberta with an estimated reserve of 1.75 trillion barrels of oil – good enough for third in the world behind Saudi Arabia (1) and Venezuela (2).
Read More »When Viruses Invade the Brain
Neurodegenerative diseases were once considered disorders of the mind, rooted in psychology. Now viruses rank among the environmental factors thought to trigger brain-ravaging diseases such as multiple sclerosis (MS) and Alzheimer’s disease.
Read More »When Viruses Invade the Brain
Neurodegenerative diseases were once considered disorders of the mind, rooted in psychology.
Read More »In the Year 9595
Watson is the IBM computer built by David Ferrucci and his team of 25 research scientists tasked with designing an artificial-intelligence (AI) system that can rival human champions at the game of Jeopardy . After beating the greatest Jeopardy champions, Ken Jennings and Brad Rutter, in February 2011, the computer is now being employed in more practical tasks such as answering diagnostic medical questions.
Read More »The Art of the Science Tattoo
It all started with a summer pool party and a Harvard neuroscientist who prefers to be called Bob. Bob--aka Sandeep Robert Datta--was splashing around the pool with his kids when science writer Carl Zimmer noticed an image of DNA inked to his shoulder
Read More »The wonderful quail…and what Sen.Coburn should learn about it.
Senator Tom Coburn (R-OK) released his “ Wastebook ” a week ago – a list of 100 government-funded projects that are supposedly a waste of money. Every campaign season, quite predictably, someone from the GOP makes a document like this, listing examples of spending that, in their view, represents the most egregious excesses of governmental spending. Counting on their voters not to know or understand anything about these projects (especially the way these are carefully framed) and aware that nobody in the mainstream media will be pointing and laughing at them, they push these memes onto the unsuspecting public
Read More »The wonderful quail…and what Sen.Coburn should learn about it.
Senator Tom Coburn (R-OK) released his “ Wastebook ” a week ago – a list of 100 government-funded projects that are supposedly a waste of money. Every campaign season, quite predictably, someone from the GOP makes a document like this, listing examples of spending that, in their view, represents the most egregious excesses of governmental spending. Counting on their voters not to know or understand anything about these projects (especially the way these are carefully framed) and aware that nobody in the mainstream media will be pointing and laughing at them, they push these memes onto the unsuspecting public
Read More »Deep Frog Voice Signals His Chromosome Number
The eastern grey tree frog [sound] looks exactly like the closely related Cope’s grey tree frog [sound]. The big difference between the two species is beneath the surface--the eastern has twice the number of chromosomes as does the Cope’s. [More]
Read More »Fat May Put Hypothalamus On Fritz
More than a third of adults in the U.S. are obese. And many of those already overweight continue to put on even more pounds.
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