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Science News

Location American Science News for 12 April 2019
The Source of That Mysterious E. Coli Outbreak Has Likely Been Found The mystery behind what's causing the E. coli outbreak that's sickened more than 100 Americans in the past month may finally be solved.
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Largest, fastest array of microscopic 'traffic cops' for optical communications Engineers at the University of California, Berkeley have built a new photonic switch that can control the direction of light passing through optical fibers faster and more efficiently than ever. This optical "traffic cop...
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Texts as networks: How many words are sufficient to identify an author? People are more original than they think--this is suggested by a literary text analysis method of stylometry proposed by scientists from the Institute of Nuclear Physics Polish Academy of Sciences. The author's individua...
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Football-Size 'Bugs' Feast on an Alligator in This Creepy Deep-Sea Video In the food deserts of the deep ocean, it doesn't take long for scavengers to find a bonanza when it lands.
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While listening to audiobooks with a captivating narrative, the inferior parietal lobe and visual cortex elicit individual meaning and flow of mental imagery.
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38 new genes involved in hearing loss identified

Neuroscience News - 12 Apr 2019 21:51
38 new genes have been implicated in hearing loss. One of the genes, SPNS2, has been linked to childhood deafness.
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Convolutional neural network model significantly outperforms previous methods and is as accurate as humans in segmenting active and overlapping neurons.
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Those who have a greater sense of 'oneness' experience overall higher levels of satisfaction with life, regardless of spiritual background or belief.
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Researchers predict the development of a brain/cloud interface that connects neurons to cloud computing networks in real time.
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Quantum simulation more stable than expected

Phys.org - 12 Apr 2019 20:00
Quantum simulation more stable than expected A localization phenomenon boosts the accuracy of solving quantum many-body problems with quantum computers. These problems are otherwise challenging for conventional computers. This brings such digital quantum simulation...
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In utero exposure to anesthesia appears to disrupt the migration of neurons to developing brain areas critical to language and cognition in rats.
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The US Department of Defense is ending its contract with cold war-era advisory group JASON. That's OK - today's scientists need to air concerns in public, says Audra J. Wolfe
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The first black hole ever directly imaged now has been nicknamed Pōwehi, but making the name official will take some time
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AI and Robotics Are Transforming Disaster Relief

Singularity Hub - 12 Apr 2019 16:00
AI and Robotics Are Transforming Disaster Relief During the past 50 years, the frequency of recorded natural disasters has surged nearly five-fold. In this blog, I'll be exploring how converging exponential technologies (AI, robotics, drones, sensors, networks) are tra...
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How hackers use tricks to make money from your clicks

New Scientist - 12 Apr 2019 14:00
Online clicks are worth big money. Now hackers are using a cunning set of click-tricks to make money from people visiting websites without them realising
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An impact in the inner asteroid belt 22 million years ago was responsible for a meteorite shower over Turkey in 2015
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Study confirms the precise nature of fractional crystallization in hard sphere mixtures Although several past studies have investigated the formation of crystals from identical particles, the conditions under which non-uniform particles crystallize and the crystals resulting from this process are still poor...
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Here's What Happens When You Put Giant Sea Spiders into Boot Camp The realization that giant sea spiders have Swiss cheese-like holes in their exoskeletons has shed light on a decades-old mystery about how underwater creatures living in the polar oceans and deep abysses got so spookily...
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The Falcon Heavy rocket's maiden flight was last February, but now it has launched a satellite for a paying customer for the first time, which is a big step for SpaceX
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Plastics are leaving no corner of the planet untouched. Tiny pieces, called microplastics, have now been found in a mountain glacier for the first time
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SLAC develops novel compact antenna for communicating where radios fail A new type of pocket-sized antenna, developed at the Department of Energy's SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, could enable mobile communication in situations where conventional radios don't work, such as under water,...
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Social Anxiety Disorder: Causes, Symptoms and Treatment Social anxiety disorder isn't just being shy.
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