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Science News

Location American Science News for 24 September 2018
Explainer: The US push to boost 'quantum computing' A race by U.S. tech companies to build a new generation of powerful "quantum computers" could get a $1.3 billion boost from Congress, fueled in part by lawmakers' fear of growing competition from China.
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Predicting Autism Risk in Pregnant Women

Neuroscience News - 24 Sep 2018 21:45
Researchers report, buy analyzing specific metabolites in pregnant female, they were able to predict with high levels of accuracy whether their child has a 1.7% increased risk of being diagnosed with ASD.
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To Dispel Myths, Redirect the Belief

Neuroscience News - 24 Sep 2018 21:41
Researchers report listening to a speaker repeating a belief increases the believability of the statement if the person listening somewhat believes the statement already. However, for those unsure of the credibility, hea...
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How Nature and Nurture Shape the Sleeping Brain

Neuroscience News - 24 Sep 2018 20:44
Using EEG to study twin teenagers, researchers tease apart the influence of genetic and environmental factors on brain activity during sleep.
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Know Someone Sick? Your Own Smell Might Give it Away

Neuroscience News - 24 Sep 2018 20:41
Researchers report the personal odors of healthy animals change when they share an environment with a sick animal. The findings suggest these changes could impact social contact and patterns of disease spread.
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A new way to count qubits

Phys.org - 24 Sep 2018 17:50
A new way to count qubits Researchers at Syracuse University, working with collaborators at the University of Wisconsin (UW)-Madison, have developed a new technique for measuring the state of quantum bits, or qubits, in a quantum computer.
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Giant "atom smashers" like CERN and SLAC are famous for their ability to accelerate matter to very nearly the speed of light. By slamming together particles like protons and electrons at extremely high speeds, physicists...
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Does Our Environment Affect the Genes in Our Brains?

Neuroscience News - 24 Sep 2018 17:03
A new study reports environmentally induced epigenetic alterations have a greater impact on intelligence that previously believed.
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Instilling the Best of Human Values in AI

Singularity Hub - 24 Sep 2018 17:00
Instilling the Best of Human Values in AI Now that the era of artificial intelligence is unquestionably upon us, it behooves us to think and work harder to ensure that the AIs we create embody positive human values. Science fiction is full of AIs that manifest t...
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Malaria could be eliminated by a CRISPR 'gene drive' that wipes out the mosquitoes that spread it, transforming the lives of hundreds of millions of people for the better
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Malaria could be eliminated by a CRISPR 'gene drive' that wipes out the mosquitoes that spread it, transforming the lives of hundreds of millions of people for the better
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Charles K. Kao, a physicist who shared a 2009 Nobel Prize for groundbreaking work in fiber optic technology, has died at age 84.
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Newly discovered magnetic state could lead to green IT solutions Magnetic skyrmions are magnetic swirls that may lead to new solutions combining low-energy consumption with high-speed computational power and high-density data storage, revolutionizing information technology. A team fro...
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Glowing Blue Clouds Ripple at Edge of Earth's Atmosphere (Video) The clouds' rippling and flow reflect the movement of air in the upper atmosphere resulting from a phenomenon called atmospheric gravity waves.
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Planet Earth Wobbles As It Spins, and Now Scientists Know Why Turns out, humans are shifting the planet's spin.
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Galileo Toned Down His Heretical Words, Long-Lost Letter Proves (But the Church Persecuted Him Anyway) A long-lost letter provides answers about Galileo's defense of science against the Catholic Church.
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Wriggling, Googly-Eyed Mass Astonishes Deep-Sea Researchers In a strange, underwater video, a black mass drifts toward the camera. It's made up of a dark, spherical blob up front and a long, thin tail in the back. And it wriggles.
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Fake news isn't making us wilfully ignorant. Our survey suggests that people are better informed and more discerning than we give them credit for
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This Super-Strong Magnet Literally Blew the Doors Off a Tokyo Laboratory There's a magnet in a secure room in Tokyo. The last time its designers switched it on, it blew open the heavy doors designed to keep it contained.
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Why Doesn't Your Vision 'Go Dark' When You Blink?

Live Science - 24 Sep 2018 10:27
Why Doesn't Your Vision 'Go Dark' When You Blink? Blinking doesn't interrupt what we see, but how does that work?
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Scarlet, the Struggling Orca, Now Presumed Dead

Live Science - 24 Sep 2018 09:45
Scarlet, the Struggling Orca, Now Presumed Dead Despite rescuers' best efforts, Scarlet, a young ailing orca, is now presumed dead.
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Japan's Hayabusa 2 spacecraft has released its two small MINERVA-II rovers on to the surface of the asteroid Ryugu, and the pair have sent back some amazing images
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