Science News
It Got Better: Life Improved After Black Death, Study Finds
Live Science - 7 May 2014 23:00
Generations of Europeans who lived after the Black Death were healthier and lived longer than those who lived before the plague's first outbreak, new research shows. The plague may have wiped out the weak and frail, leav...
Graphene for real-world devices
e! Science News - 7 May 2014 02:11
Graphene, a one-atom-thick form of the carbon material graphite, has been hailed as a wonder material -- strong, light, nearly transparent, and an excellent conductor of electricity and heat. But a number of practical ch...
White House Unveils Dire Warning, Calls For Action On Climate
IBTimes - 7 May 2014 03:34
(Reuters) - The Obama administration on Tuesday released an updated report on how a changing climate has touched every corner of the country, from oyster growers in Washington State to maple syrup producers in Vermont, a...
Sorry, Touch Screens Won't Turn Baby Into Einstein
Live Science - 7 May 2014 23:18
Playing with touch screen devices may have no benefits in the cognitive development of kids younger than 3 years, even though many parents swear by the devices' 'educational benefits.'
Women's Pelvic Surgeries Soar Since 1990s
Live Science - 7 May 2014 23:15
About 20 percent of women now will have pelvic surgery during her lifetime, nearly double the risk of having one of these surgeries in the 1990s, a new study says.
Mind the Gap: New Evidence for Alaskan Tsunamis Found
Live Science - 7 May 2014 22:39
New evidence uncovered at several spots along Alaska's scenic coastline reveals that many tsunamis have flooded the region's southern islands and fjords in the past several thousand years.
Yuck! Photos of 'Rock Snot' Algae Infestations
Live Science - 7 May 2014 22:35
Didymo, also known as "rock snot," is a type of freshwater algae that clumps on rocks and invades river bottoms.
Why It's Perfectly Normal to See Jesus in Toast
Live Science - 7 May 2014 22:15
Seeing Jesus' face in a piece of toast is a perfectly normal phenomenon, and new research suggests that an area of the brain responsible for processing faces is activated when people think they see a face that isn't ther...
Sonar Spots Invisible Arctic Oil Spills
Scientific American - 7 May 2014 22:00
Boom in Arctic Ocean drilling means hazardous leaks under ice, hidden from sight--but not from sound --
Silicon pill beams back body's response to medicines
New Scientist - 7 May 2014 21:30
Drugs work best when taken as prescribed. Take control with the help of a smart pill and skin patch that report back if you forget to take your meds
Weird Engineered Organism Has 6-Letter DNA
Live Science - 7 May 2014 21:00
The first report of a bacterium whose genome contains man-made DNA building blocks opens the door for tailor-made organisms that could be used to produce new drugs and other products.
QBism: Is quantum uncertainty all in the mind?
New Scientist - 7 May 2014 21:00
The microscopic world described by quantum theory seems a strange, confusing place - but some physicists argue it's just us who are uncertain (full text available to subscribers)
Soy Sauce Yields Potential HIV Drug
Live Science - 7 May 2014 20:49
In their quest for new medications, researchers have looked in some unusual places. Now, researchers from the University of Missouri have found that soy sauce contains a potent antiviral compound that may someday be used...
Culture and psychology: You are what you eat
The Economist - 7 May 2014 20:33
Collective farming in more ways than one THAT orientals and occidentals think in different ways is not mere prejudice. Many psychological studies conducted over the past two decades suggest Westerners have a more individ...
Genes and intelligence: The 3% solution
The Economist - 7 May 2014 20:33
PEOPLE are living longer, which is good. But old age often brings a decline in mental faculties and many researchers are looking for ways to slow or halt such decline. One group doing so is led by Dena Dubal of the Unive...
Is There Life After Death?
Live Science - 7 May 2014 20:32
Is there an afterlife, or is death the end of everything? Will we ever know the answer?
World is unprepared for major El Niño later this year
New Scientist - 7 May 2014 20:30
Wild weather is coming in 2014, with floods, storms and droughts expected around the Pacific, but little is being done to protect the people on the front line
Is There Life After Death? Watch Scientists Debate Tonight Online
Live Science - 7 May 2014 20:27
Is death the end of everything? Watch a group of physicians and scientists debate the mystery of human consciousness, the meaning of near-death experiences, and the possibility of life after death.
Podcast: Element 117 and the Island of Stability
Physics Buzz - 7 May 2014 20:04
An international collaboration of scientists has created element 117 in a laboratory at the GSI Helmholtz Center for Heavy Ion Research in Darmstadt, Germany. Element 117--temporarily referred to as ununseptium--was fir...
Psychiatry's scientific reboot gets under way
New Scientist - 7 May 2014 20:00
The diagnosis of mental disorders is stuck in the pre-scientific age - but a research programme into their neurological bases promises better treatments
Saying %$#@ May Help Politicians Get Elected
Live Science - 7 May 2014 19:56
Although many people find swearing offensive, male politicians may want to let loose a few swear words next time they're giving a speech.
Computer simulation supports a "holographic" theory describing a black hole
Phys.org - 7 May 2014 19:37
A "holographic" theory, which was conjectured to describe accurately the dynamical phenomena occurring in a black hole, has been tested numerically by a research group composed of four researchers: Masanori Hanada, Ph.D....