Science News
Men Don't Get Your Feelings, And Science Still Can't Explain It
Live Science - 12 Mar 2018 12:42Polar melt may shut down the Atlantic current that warms Europe
New Scientist - 12 Mar 2018 18:00
Melting Arctic ice flooding into the Atlantic could put the ocean circulation that warms Europe in danger, triggering dramatic sea-level rise and drought
A possible experiment to prove that gravity and quantum mechanics can be reconciled
Phys.org - 12 Mar 2018 14:50
Two teams of researchers working independently of one another have come up with an experiment designed to prove that gravity and quantum mechanics can be reconciled. The first team is a pairing of Chiara Marletto of the ...
Chemical topology of silica can influence the effectiveness of many chemical processes that use it
Phys.org - 12 Mar 2018 23:40
Better known as glass, silica is a versatile material used in myriad industrial processes, from catalysis and filtration, to chromatography and nanofabrication. Yet despite its ubiquity in labs and cleanrooms, surprising...
Researchers Discover Early Signatures of the Social Brain
Neuroscience News - 12 Mar 2018 23:39
A new study reports the brain network that controls theory of mind, the ability to interpret the thoughts of others, is already developed in children as young as three.
Researchers use 'flying focus' to better control lasers over long distances
Phys.org - 12 Mar 2018 23:37
When you were a kid, you might have used a magnifying glass to focus the sun's light onto a spot on the sidewalk. The lens of the magnifying glass allowed you to concentrate the sun's energy by converging the light rays ...
Movable silicon 'lenses' enable neutrons to see new range of details inside objects
Phys.org - 12 Mar 2018 23:34
You can't see well without lenses that can focus, whether those lenses are in your eye or the microscope you peer through. An innovative new way to focus beams of neutrons might allow scientists to probe the interiors of...
CRISPR Helps Find New Genetic Suspects Behind ALS and FTD
Neuroscience News - 12 Mar 2018 22:48
Using CRISPR, researchers have identified a new set of genes that may be implicated in both ALS and frontotemporal dementia.
We've just spotted the brightest mystery radio burst from space
New Scientist - 12 Mar 2018 22:16
Fast radio bursts are some of the weirdest, most elusive phenomena in the cosmos. We just found three new ones, one of which is the brightest we've ever seen
Study Tackles Neuroscience Claims to Have Disproved "Free Will"
Neuroscience News - 12 Mar 2018 21:08
A new qualitative review calls into question previous findings about the neuroscience of free will.
Psychopaths pay less attention to what other people are thinking
New Scientist - 12 Mar 2018 21:00
Psychopaths in films and TV are often masters of manipulation, but in real life they're not so good at subconsciously registering other people's perspectives
Autism's Social Deficits Are Reversed by an Anti-Cancer Drug
Neuroscience News - 12 Mar 2018 20:45
According to researchers, a low dose of the anti cancer drug romidepsin reduced social deficits in animal models of autism.
Caloric Restriction in Combination With Low-Fat Diet Helps Protect Aging Brains: Mouse Study
Neuroscience News - 12 Mar 2018 20:32
A new study reveals low fat diets and limited caloric intake may prevent age induced activation of microglia.
Daft male spiders prefer females who are more likely to eat them
New Scientist - 12 Mar 2018 20:00
Female brown widow spiders become less fertile as they age, and more likely to kill and eat their mates - yet males still prefer them over younger females
$10m prize to let you feel what a distant robot is feeling
New Scientist - 12 Mar 2018 19:12
The latest XPrize competition wants to develop technology that lets anyone control a robot and carry out tasks from 100 kilometres away
Found: more than 500 genes that are linked to intelligence
New Scientist - 12 Mar 2018 19:00
Intelligence is thought to be up to 80 per cent genetic, but it's been hard to pin down the genes involved. Now the largest study of its kind has found hundreds
Start-up accused of launching mini satellites without permission
New Scientist - 12 Mar 2018 18:51
In what seems to be the first unauthorised satellite launch, a start-up company may have sent four tiny - and potentially dangerous - satellites into space
Election polling accuracy has not improved since the 1940s
New Scientist - 12 Mar 2018 18:01
Failure to predict Brexit and Trump has created a crisis for the polling industry, but actually errors in election polls have stayed the same over the past 75 years
Riding the (quantum magnetic) wave--Next-generation electronics one leap closer to reality
Phys.org - 12 Mar 2018 18:00
In 1991, University of Utah chemist Joel Miller developed the first magnet with carbon-based, or organic, components that was stable at room temperature. It was a great advance in magnetics, and he's been exploring the a...
Holography approach improves heads up displays for planes and cars
Phys.org - 12 Mar 2018 17:26
Heads-up displays are transparent devices used in airplanes and cars to provide information such as critical flight data or driving directions on the windshield. An innovative holography-based approach could soon make th...
How to Overhaul Your Business to Take Advantage of the Internet of Things
Singularity Hub - 12 Mar 2018 17:00
If you're not learning, you're missing out on earnings It's easy to write off the Internet of Things (IoT) as a great technology solution looking for a problem; yet another acronym clogging up the hype cycle. High-perfor...