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Science News

Location American Science News for 25 February 2015
Arms, Cells ... Faces? How 3D Printing is Reconstructing Medicine (Gallery) If 3D printed organs and prosthetics weren't already cool, now Marvel is on board.
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How did fuzzy logic help a group of researchers in Tunisia and Algeria create an ideal photovoltaic system that obeys the supply-and-demand principle and its delicate balance?
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Best Smart Scale: Fitbit Aria vs. Withings Body Analyzer After testing nine smart scales, we recommend the Withings Smart Body Analyzer over the popular Fitbit Aria. Read our full review here.
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Rapid data transfer thanks to quantum physics

Phys.org - 25 Feb 2015 15:38
Rapid data transfer thanks to quantum physics RUB engineers have developed a new concept for accelerating data transfer in server farms. To this end, the team at the Chair of Photonics and Terahertz Technology applies a quantum-mechanical variable, i.e. the spin. RU...
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3 Men Get Bionic Hands After Nerve Injuries

Live Science - 25 Feb 2015 01:39
3 Men Get Bionic Hands After Nerve Injuries Three men who suffered car or climbing accidents that caused a permanent loss of hand function became the first people with this type of injury to receive bionic hands controlled by transplanted nerve tissue, a new study...
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Icicles and Frozen Waterfalls: The Ice Caves of Apostle Islands Stunning ice caves off the coast of Lake Superior may open to visitors this weekend if conditions are right.
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A simple way to make and reconfigure complex emulsions

e! Science News - 25 Feb 2015 23:36
MIT researchers have devised a new way to make complex liquid mixtures, known as emulsions, that could have many applications in drug delivery, sensing, cleaning up pollutants, and performing chemical reactions.
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'Love' Hormone Sobers Up Drunken Rats

Live Science - 25 Feb 2015 23:20
'Love' Hormone Sobers Up Drunken Rats A little injection of the so-called 'love' hormone, oxytocin, can sober up drunken rats, reversing their clumsy alcohol-induced behaviors, scientists report.
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Plugging away

The Economist - 25 Feb 2015 22:33
Plugging away A nice post-coital snack SMACK! You've managed violently to halt a mosquito snacking on your blood. But how likely is it that the departed beastie was the kind that transmits malaria? The latest research shows that the a...
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Greenhouse Effect Is Witnessed...and Getting Worse

Live Science - 25 Feb 2015 21:46
Greenhouse Effect Is Witnessed...and Getting Worse The climate-changing greenhouse effect exists and has been directly measured in the United States.
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Drug-resistant malaria poised to cross into India

New Scientist - 25 Feb 2015 21:00
Resistance to vital antimalarial drugs called artemisinins has spread across Burma to the Indian border. If not contained, it could ultimately hit Africa hard
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Google's Artificial Intelligence Can Probably Beat You at Video Games Computers have already beaten humans at chess and "Jeopardy!," and now they can add one more feather to their caps: the ability to best humans in several classic arcade games.
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Google AI Teaches Itself to Play Classic Arcade Games | Video Google has developed an artificially intelligent program that can teach itself to play classic arcade games such as "Pong" and "Space Invaders," improving its performance over time.
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MIT researchers have devised a new way to make complex liquid mixtures, known as emulsions, that could have many applications in drug delivery, sensing, cleaning up pollutants, and performing chemical reactions.
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Today on New Scientist

New Scientist - 25 Feb 2015 20:15
All the latest on newscientist.com: first human head transplant, bionic hands, black hole mystery, and more
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Warming up the world of superconductors

Phys.org - 25 Feb 2015 20:00
A superconductor that works at room temperature was long thought impossible, but scientists at USC may have discovered a family of materials that could make it reality.
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Computers, gaming

The Economist - 25 Feb 2015 20:00
Computers, gaming HOW good are computers at learning to play computer games? The chart shows the performance of a machine using artificial intelligence to play a selection of classic video games, compared with that of a professional human...
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Ancient black hole had an inexplicable growth spurt

New Scientist - 25 Feb 2015 20:00
Reaching 12 billion times the mass of the sun just a billion years after the big bang, a black hole has astronomers mystified about its rapid growth
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Google DeepMind AI outplays humans at video games

New Scientist - 25 Feb 2015 20:00
Artificial intelligence software, built by a Google subsidiary in London, has learned to play 49 old Atari games just by watching them
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Did dark matter do in the dinosaurs?

The Economist - 25 Feb 2015 19:53
Did dark matter do in the dinosaurs? EVERY 250m years the sun, with its entourage of planets, completes a circuit of the Milky Way. Its journey around its home galaxy, though, is no stately peregrination. Rather, its orbit oscillates up and down through the...
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First human head transplant could happen in two years

New Scientist - 25 Feb 2015 19:00
A radical plan for transplanting a head onto someone else's body is set to be announced. But is such ethically sensitive surgery even feasible?
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Watch desert dust cross the ocean as seen from space

New Scientist - 25 Feb 2015 18:56
For the first time, a satellite has calculated the whopping amount of Saharan dust that is blown over the ocean to reach the Amazon rainforest every year
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