Science Ticker

A roundup of research and breaking news

  1. Neuroscience

    MRI scans reveal how the brain tells the body to pee

    Scientists see heightened brain activity in men right before they urinate.

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  2. Enzyme separates healthy and unhealthy obesity

    Healthy versus unhealthy obesity depends on levels of an enzyme that causes inflammation.

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  3. Astronomy

    Young stars vibrate faster as they age

    Stellar pulsations provide a new way to gauge ages of infant stars.

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  4. Animals

    Mantis shrimp tune their eyes with sunscreen

    Blocking some rays in just the right way creates six ways of actually seeing ultraviolet light.

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  5. Health & Medicine

    Candidate asthma and allergy drug passes early test

    By suppressing an inflammation-causing antibody, an experimental drug can lessen allergy and asthma symptoms for months at a time.

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  6. Planetary Science

    Titan’s origins linked to Oort cloud

    The building blocks of Titan may have formed in the early solar system, not from a warm disk around Saturn when the planet was young.

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  7. Ecosystems

    Invasive insect tied to shrinking river

    A river in North Carolina shrank after a hemlock woolly adelgid eradicated eastern hemlock trees in the region.

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  8. Animals

    Emperor penguin population could decline by 2100

    Emperor penguins’ reign over Antarctic sea ice could be in decline by the beginning of the 22nd century.

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  9. Neuroscience

    Shaking up the body may improve attention

    Just two minutes of whole body vibrations improved young adults’ attention to detail.

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  10. Chemistry

    Safe salt could yield cheaper, more efficient solar cells

    Magnesium chloride could be the key ingredient for concocting efficient solar cells with cadmium telluride.

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  11. Physics

    Tiny silica spheres put the disco in disco clams

    The electric effect in disco clams is actually the result of light scattering off tiny silica spheres.

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  12. Microbes

    The most personal data on your phone is your microbiome

    Phones carry more than your contacts and messages. They’ve got your microbiome too.

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