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Science News

Location American Science News for 12 March 2019
Firing a laser at a pair of black holes can produce more energy than you start with, letting you travel the galaxy without needing a large amount of fuel
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Neurofeedback Gets You Back In the Zone

Neuroscience News - 12 Mar 2019 23:56
Neurofeedback can be used to modify a person's state of arousal in order to improve performance in sensory motor tasks, biomedical engineers report.
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Researchers report trigeminal nerve stimulation, administered during sleep, is both effective and safe for treating ADHD in children. The study reveals the treatment helps to reduce behavioral symptoms of ADHD and increa...
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Human activities, like farming and building roads, is impacting a quarter of the world's vulnerable vertebrate species
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Tied in knots: New insights into plasma behavior focus on twists and turns Whether zipping through a star or a fusion device on Earth, the electrically charged particles that make up the fourth state of matter better known as plasma are bound to magnetic field lines like beads on a string. Unfo...
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A new species of frog discovered on the forest floor in India's Western Ghat mountain range is the only member of an ancient lineage stretching back millions of years
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Decolonizing science through sci comm

Symmetry Magazine - 12 Mar 2019 16:21
Science writer Sibusiso Biyela aims to bring science back to South Africa's Zulu communities. South Africa will be one of the homes of the Square Kilometer Array Project, an international effort to build the world's larg...
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A New Ion-Drive Transistor Is Here to Interface With Your Brain Silicon transistors and the brain don't mix. At least not optimally. As scientists and companies are increasingly exploring ways to interface your brain with computers, fashioning new hardware that conforms to and compli...
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An electronically tunable metasurface that rotates polarization Researchers at the University of Michigan and City University of New York have recently proposed and experimentally validated a transparent, electronically tunable metasurface. This metasurface, presented in a paper publ...
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A study claims that air pollution causes 9 million "extra" deaths worldwide each year, including 800,000 in Europe - which is double previous estimates
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Physicists lower threshold for detecting extremely weak magnetic signals Physicists at Saarland University have developed magnetic field sensors that are breaking sensitivity records and opening up a whole range of potential new applications, from non-contact measurements of the electrical ac...
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New microscopy method could improve LASIK surgery A team of University of Maryland bioengineering researchers have developed a microscopy technique that could one day be used to improve LASIK and eliminate the "surgery" aspect of the procedure. Their findings were publi...
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The US Food and Drug Administration has approved a form of ketamine for use in treatment-resistant depression. While there are unknowns, it is a welcome move, says Celia Morgan
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Young YouTube viewers have a 45 per cent chance of reaching inappropriate content within 10 clicks of a single child-oriented video
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A new 50p coin will memorialise Stephen Hawking, who died last year, while paying respect to his groundbreaking research on black holes
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A Man Cleaned His Ears with a Cotton Swab. Then He Got an Infection in His Skull. A man in England has sworn off cleaning his ears with a cotton swabs after developing a potentially life-threatening infection.
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Water Molecules Bounce Around the Moon. Here's Why.

Live Science - 12 Mar 2019 12:49
Water Molecules Bounce Around the Moon. Here's Why. It's too hot to sit still
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This Octopus's Dreams (Maybe) Were Written All Over Its Body A sleeping octopus was caught on video changing color as it slept. Was it dreaming?
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Early Animal Life Exploded on Earth Even Earlier Than Once Thought The rise of new species during the Cambrian may have been more like a wave than an explosion.
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The West thinks China's internet is all about firewalls and censorship, but as a new book shows, the battle for control is full of dubious motives
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Claire's Recalls 3 Makeup Products for Possible Asbestos Contamination Shopping mall standby Claire's is voluntarily recalling three of its makeup products due to the possible presence of asbestos fibers, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) announced today (March. 12).
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Women's Genes May Increase Risk of Birth Control Failure, Study Suggests In some cases, a woman's genes may put her at risk for an unplanned pregnancy even while using hormonal birth control properly.
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