Science News
'Scientists are now very sure that the babies really were gene-edited'
New Scientist - 29 Nov 2018 14:32
He Jiankui has now presented his controversial work at a gene editing summit in Hong Kong. CRISPR expert Helen O'Neill of University College London was there
Rewriting the Brain Pathway for Consciousness
Neuroscience News - 29 Nov 2018 20:53
Researchers say a new discovery about the pathways associated with consciousness contradicts conventional belief. The study reports the thalamus is not a critical part of the brain's pathway involved in wakefulness and c...
First study of terahertz radiation in liquids
Phys.org - 29 Nov 2018 16:36
A research team from ITMO University and the University of Rochester (U.S.) conducted a study on the formation of terahertz radiation in liquids. Previously, the generation of such radiation in a liquid medium was consid...
Star Light, Star Bright: Measuring All the Starlight (Ever!)
Physics Buzz - 29 Nov 2018 23:31
If you made a wish on every star in the universe, you'd need to make about a trillion trillion wishes--that's a 1 followed by 24 zeros. Of course, you can't see all of those stars from your bedroom window. You can't even...
Scientists find a way to enhance the performance of quantum computers
Phys.org - 29 Nov 2018 22:16
USC scientists have demonstrated a theoretical method to enhance the performance of quantum computers, an important step to scale a technology with potential to solve some of society's biggest challenges.
Revealing hidden information in sound waves
Phys.org - 29 Nov 2018 21:30
By essentially turning down the pitch of sound waves, University of Michigan engineering researchers have devised a way to unlock greater amounts of data from acoustic fields than ever before.
Switching identities: Revolutionary insulator-like material also conducts electricity
Phys.org - 29 Nov 2018 21:00
University of Wisconsin-Madison researchers have made a material that can transition from an electricity-transmitting metal to a nonconducting insulating material without changing its atomic structure.
Stone tools hint that our first human ancestors lived all over Africa
New Scientist - 29 Nov 2018 21:00
We thought the first Homo species evolved in East Africa 2.8 million years ago, but stone tools from Algeria suggest our origins may have spanned the continent
Some spiders produce milk - and it's more nutritious than cow's milk
New Scientist - 29 Nov 2018 21:00
One species of spider seems to have worked out how to recycle unused eggs into a milk that contains four times the protein of cow's milk
Extinct 'Denisovan' people may have lived on Earth's highest plateau
New Scientist - 29 Nov 2018 21:00
The Tibetan Plateau is a tough environment so we thought humans arrived only about 12,000 years ago, but it seems someone was there 40,000 to 30,000 years ago
How Sounds Going Through Our Ears Become the Words Going Through Our Brains
Neuroscience News - 29 Nov 2018 20:48
A new study reveals how the brain processes sound and how quickly neurons transition from processing the sound of speech to the language based words.
Youth Football Changes Nerve Fibers in Brain
Neuroscience News - 29 Nov 2018 20:44
Researchers report repeated blows to the head as a result of playing youth football has implications for brain development. The study revealed players had alterations to the nerve fibers in the corpus callosum.
Effective New Target for Mood Boosting Brain Stimulation Found
Neuroscience News - 29 Nov 2018 20:41
Stimulating the lateral orbitofrontal cortex improves mood in those suffering from depression, a new study reveals.
Study Reveals Roots of OCD
Neuroscience News - 29 Nov 2018 18:38
A new study combines hundreds of brain scans of patients with OCD and pinpoints problems with error processing in the brain that leads to repetitive behaviors.
Einstein's Theory of General Relativity Just Survived a Massive Crash in Outer Space
Live Science - 29 Nov 2018 18:26Prehistoric whales used to simply suck their food out of the ocean
New Scientist - 29 Nov 2018 18:00
A 33-million-year-old-fossil suggests some whales evolved baleens for filter feeding only after losing their teeth, so they must have sucked food from the water
A vast study seeks to understand the genetic underpinnings of ADHD
The Economist - 29 Nov 2018 17:47
TRUE DISORDER or mythical modern ailment? Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is one of the most controversial topics in psychiatry. Not for the first time, the internet is brimming with conflicting informati...
A maverick researcher claims to have created GM children
The Economist - 29 Nov 2018 17:47
THE SECOND International Summit on Human Genome Editing, held in Hong Kong this week, was supposed to be a forum in which the idea of editing the genomes of human embryos could be discussed calmly and soberly. Fat chance...
A probe lands on Mars
The Economist - 29 Nov 2018 17:47
THIS IS THE view from the instrument deployment camera of InSight, America's latest probe to Mars, which landed safely on November 26th. InSight joins one, or possibly two, other missions now operating on the Martian sur...
Experience of phantom limbs lets amputees control real replacements
The Economist - 29 Nov 2018 17:47
How they used to do it IN THE EARLY 16th century a knight called Gottfried von Berlichingen spent decades marauding and feuding on behalf of the Holy Roman Empire. He conducted most of his career singlehandedly--the othe...
This Strange Hum Circled the Whole World. But Nobody Heard It.
Live Science - 29 Nov 2018 17:25How One Researcher Is Using VR to Help Our Eyes Adapt to Seeing in Space
Singularity Hub - 29 Nov 2018 17:00
It's not like moon-walking astronauts don't already have plenty of hazards to deal with. There's less gravity, extreme temperatures, radiation--and the whole place is aggressively dusty. If that weren't enough, it also t...