All Stories

  1. Animals

    How male seahorses tap into their mothering side

    By studying the genes responsible for the seahorse’s brood pouch, researchers uncovered a new route to “motherhood.”

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  2. Psychology

    Chatbots spewing facts, and falsehoods, can sway voters

    Chatbots that dole out fact-laden arguments can sway voters. Those facts don’t have to be true.

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  3. Paleontology

    Nanotyrannus is still not a teenage T. rex

    Nanotyrannus wasn’t a juvenile T. rex but a petite adult of a separate species, a new study of fossil hyoid bones finds, bolstering a recent report.

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  4. Health & Medicine

    How a bacterial toxin linked to colon cancer messes with DNA

    A closeup look at colibactin’s structure reveals chemical motifs that guide its mutation-wreaking “warheads” to specific stretches of DNA.

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  5. Earth

    A volcanic eruption might have helped bring the Black Plague to Europe

    A volcanic eruption may have triggered a deadly chain of events that brought the Black Plague to Europe in the 14th century.

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  6. Animals

    Ancient DNA reveals China’s first ‘pet’ cat wasn’t the house cat

    The modern house cat reached China in the 8th century. Before that, another cat — the leopard cat — hunted the rodents in ancient Chinese settlements.

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  7. Humans

    Ancient southern Africans took genetic evolution in a new direction

    An ancient, shared set of human-specific genes underwent changes in a geographically isolated population after around 300,000 years ago, scientists say.

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  8. Earth

    Human-caused earthquakes are real. Here’s why even stable regions can snap

    Human activity can cause “healed” faults to release their stored strength, triggering unexpected quakes in tectonically stable regions.

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  9. Physics

    Twisted stacks of 2-D carbon act like a weird type of superconductor

    “Magic-angle” graphene may provide new clues into poorly understood unconventional superconductors, which operate at higher-than-normal temperatures.

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  10. Health & Medicine

    Self-hypnosis with cooling mental imagery could ease hot flashes

    Postmenopausal women who listened to self-guided hypnosis recordings daily for six weeks saw meaningful improvements in hot flash symptoms.

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  11. Health & Medicine

    Personalized ‘prehabilitation’ helps the body brace for major surgery

    A small study finds that individualized prehab can dampen harmful immune responses and may reduce complications after an operation.

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  12. Humans

    A therapeutic HPV vaccine shrank cervical tumors in mice

    An HPV vaccine delivered into the nose can treat cervical tumors in mice. The vaccine targets a cancer protein produced by the virus.

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