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Science News

Location American Science News for 27 January 2015

What Facebook Addiction Looks Like in the Brain

Live Science - 27 Jan 2015 14:28
What Facebook Addiction Looks Like in the Brain People who report a strong compulsion to use Facebook have brain abnormalities similar to those of people addicted to other substances.
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E. O. Wilson: Religious faith is dragging us down

New Scientist - 27 Jan 2015 22:00
The extinctions we cause will kill us too, says the sociobiology pioneer - the best thing would be to eliminate religions, though not human spiritual yearning (full text available to subscribers)
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Broadest set of results to date about the properties of the Higgs boson With the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) preparing to restart in a few months, data from its first run has already been bearing fruit.
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Ancient planets are almost as old as the universe

New Scientist - 27 Jan 2015 03:00
The oldest rocky planets yet are 11.2 billion years old, just a little younger than the universe - meaning the galaxy made an early start on planet building
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Widely Used Drugs Tied to Greater Dementia Risk for Seniors People over age 65 who frequently take over-the-counter sleep aids and certain other commonly used drugs may be increasing their risk of dementia, new findings show.
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DARPA Overhauls 'Atlas' Robot Ahead of Competition This Summer What do you call a robot that can drive a car, break down walls and scale buildings? Hint: It's not "the Terminator."
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New battery technology from the University of Michigan should be able to prevent the kind of fires that grounded Boeing 787 Dreamliners in 2013.
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Turbulent lessons from tropical storms

New Scientist - 27 Jan 2015 21:00
From 16th-century colonisers of the Caribbean to Katrina's victims, Stuart Schwarz's Sea of Storms explores the long geopolitical shadow of tropical hurricanes
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Of symmetries, the strong force and Helen Quinn

Symmetry Magazine - 27 Jan 2015 20:03
Scientist Helen Quinn has had a significant impact on the field of theoretical physics. Modern theoretical physicists spend much of their time examining the symmetries governing particles and their interactions. Research...
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Why Wasps Massacre Each Other ... Over Figs

Live Science - 27 Jan 2015 19:32
Why Wasps Massacre Each Other ... Over Figs Trade-offs between optimising current and future reproduction are also common.
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Today on New Scientist

New Scientist - 27 Jan 2015 19:30
All the latest on newscientist.com: normal foot myth, eco-utopias vs eco-activism, planets almost as old as the universe and more
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New technology makes creating ultrashort infrared laser pulses easy and cheap In a marathon, everyone starts at roughly the same place at roughly the same time. But the faster runners will gradually increase their lead, and in the end, the distribution of runners on the street will be very broad. ...
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Most Americans Say They Would Donate Tissue to Research Most Americans are willing to donate tissue samples to be used in research, but their willingness drops when they're told about possible, morally- charged uses of their specimens, a new study finds.
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Bill Nye Drops the Ball on DeflateGate

Physics Buzz - 27 Jan 2015 18:25
The one person who really looks bad in the whole DeflateGate scandal is Bill Nye.  No matter how you feel about Bill Belichick, Tom Brady, and the Patriots, one good thing that has come out of the DeflateGate scandal ha...
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Drones Will Be Everywhere Watching, Listening, and...Planting Millions of Trees? More and more people are getting to know drones, and not just the military kind. Drones were one of the hottest gifts over the holidays because they're not only getting...
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Oldest Known Snake Fossils Identified

Live Science - 27 Jan 2015 18:06
Oldest Known Snake Fossils Identified Researchers have discovered the oldest known snake fossils, according to a new study.
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Ancient Human Fossil Could Be New Primitive Species

Live Science - 27 Jan 2015 18:02
Ancient Human Fossil Could Be New Primitive Species An ancient human fossil discovered from the seafloor near Taiwan reveals that a primitive group of humans, potentially an unknown species, once lived in Asia, researchers say.
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US Obesity Rates Have Risen Most in Older Adults

Live Science - 27 Jan 2015 17:57
US Obesity Rates Have Risen Most in Older Adults Obesity rates have increased among most groups in the United States in recent years, but the biggest rise has been among older adults, according to a new poll.
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European Ice Cap Shows Extreme Ice Loss

Live Science - 27 Jan 2015 17:28
European Ice Cap Shows Extreme Ice Loss Norway's Austfonna ice cap is shrinking faster than 20 years ago, especially in the region where the ice meets the sea.
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Self-help healthcare fuelled shock Greek election win

New Scientist - 27 Jan 2015 17:03
Volunteer-run services are plugging holes left by cutbacks in Greece and may have helped focus support for the radical Syriza party
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Popper's experiment realized again--but what does it mean? (Phys.org)--Like Einstein, the philosopher Karl Popper was a realist who was deeply bothered by some of the odd implications of quantum mechanics. Both Popper and Einstein disliked the idea in Heisenberg's uncertainty pr...
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New pathway to valleytronics

Phys.org - 27 Jan 2015 15:20
New pathway to valleytronics A potential avenue to quantum computing currently generating quite the buzz in the high-tech industry is "valleytronics," in which information is coded based on the wavelike motion of electrons moving through certain two...
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