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Science News

Location American Science News for 4 July 2019

The rock-paper-scissors game and coexistence

Phys.org - 4 Jul 2019 17:30
The rock-paper-scissors game and coexistence In 1975, R.M. May and W.J. Leonard first used the rock-paper-scissors game to model ecological scenarios in which three species cyclically dominate each other: one species dominates a second species, the second species d...
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Portable polarization-sensitive camera could be used in machine vision, autonomous vehicles, security and more When the first full-length movie made with the advanced, three-color process of Technicolor premiered in 1935, The New York Times declared "it produced in the spectator all the excitement of standing upon a peak ... and ...
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The Largest Black Holes in the Universe Formed in a Snap -- Then Stopped The biggest, oldest black holes in the universe shouldn't technically exist. A new study provides fresh evidence for the weird, "direct collapse" process that may have made them.
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A massive 9000-kilometre-stretch of algae spanning between west Africa and the Gulf of Mexico is threatening marine life and ecosystems
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Unraveling the brain's reward circuits

Neuroscience News - 4 Jul 2019 20:45
Study reveals how ArGP and dopamine neurons are linked, and how food and drugs affect them differently. The findings offer clues for the development of new treatments for obesity and substance use disorders.
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Determined DNA hunt reveals schizophrenia clue

Neuroscience News - 4 Jul 2019 20:11
NAPRT1, a gene that encodes an enzyme involved in vitamin B3 metabolism, may be a risk factor for schizophrenia. Knocking out the gene in zebrafish models, researchers discovered brain development became impaired. Withou...
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YouTube's recommendation algorithm is the worst at recommending extremist content compared to Gab, a right wing social media site, and Reddit
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SOME VISIONARIES hope that insects will play a big role in future human diets. Insects are nutritious, being packed with protein. Unlike hot-blooded mammals and birds, which use a lot of energy to keep themselves warm, t...
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A FEW YEARS ago Kripa Varanasi, a researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, made the news with a ketchup bottle that could be emptied without leaving any of the ketchup behind. Instead of sticking to the b...
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COINS AND other metal artefacts dug from archaeological sites bear witness to their burial in the form of the patinas of chemicals which accumulate on their surfaces--and different circumstances will result in different ...
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Japan resumes commercial whaling

The Economist - 4 Jul 2019 18:59
ON JULY 1st, to the fury of conservationists around the world, Japanese whalers landed their first commercial kill for more than 30 years, a minke whale (pictured above). In 1986 the countries of the International Whalin...
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Russian biologist Denis Rebrikov plans to help five couples who are deaf try CRISPR gene-editing to avoid having a child that inherits the condition
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An atomic-scale erector set

Phys.org - 4 Jul 2019 17:10
An atomic-scale erector set To design buildings that can withstand the largest of storms, Kostas Keremidis, a Ph.D. candidate at the MIT Concrete Sustainability Hub, is using research at the smallest scale--that of the atom.
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Why Do People Scrunch Up Their Faces After Tasting Something Sour? Why do we give such a sour-looking response to sour foods?
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Unusually Large 2-Billion-Year-Old Microbe Fossils Reveal Clues About Our Ancient World These fossils could show the life-forms that gave Earth its earliest whiffs of oxygen, but not everyone is convinced.
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The First Fireworks Came from a 2,000-Year-Old Chinese Quest for Immortality Ancient alchemy never did discover a death defying concoction -- but it did produce a bang
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Scientists combine light and matter to make particles with new behaviors Every type of atom in the universe has a unique fingerprint: It only absorbs or emits light at the particular energies that match the allowed orbits of its electrons. That fingerprint enables scientists to identify an at...
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New experiments with ice at very high pressures could force us to rethink our understanding of water on Earth and other planets
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We haven't found any moons around exoplanets, which may be because they are flung away and turn into "ploonets" - a fate that could one day befall our own moon
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(University of North Carolina Health Care) Scientists demonstrated the technique by evolving several proteins to perform precise new tasks, each time doing it in a matter of days. Existing methods of directed evolution a...
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(American Association for the Advancement of Science) Researchers have discovered a biochemical oxygen sensing system conserved across biological kingdoms, which allows both plant and animal cells to sense and respond ap...
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The National Trust, a UK conservation charity, will sell off its investments in fossil fuel companies including BP, Shell and Total over the next three years
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