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5,128 results for: seek
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PsychologyNo, cheese is not just like crack
Recent news reports claimed that a study shows cheese is addictive. But the facts behind the research show cheese and crack have little in common.
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PsychologyAs suicide rates rise, researchers separate thoughts from actions
Advances in suicide research and treatment may depend on separating thoughts from acts.
By Bruce Bower -
LifeGood luck outsmarting a mosquito
Mosquitoes use their senses in sophisticated combinations and sequences to find you.
By Susan Milius -
GeneticsAncient East Asians mixed and mingled multiple times with Neandertals
East Asians’ ancestors interbred with Neandertals more than once, explaining why modern East Asians carry more Neandertal DNA than Europeans do, two studies suggest.
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AnimalsSnake moms-to-be crave toxic toads
The snake Rhabdophis tigrinus seeks out toxic toads to eat when breeding. The snakes can then pass the poisons on to her offspring as chemical defenses.
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NeuroscienceAdolescent brains open to change
Adolescent brains are still changing, a malleability that renders them particularly sensitive to the outside world.
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LifeSemen seems to counteract microbicides that kill HIV
Semen seems to inhibit most microbicides from killing HIV, but one that targets a receptor on cells remains effective, suggesting a promising approach against HIV.
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PhysicsTiny particles propel themselves upstream
Light-activated, human-made particles can align themselves with the flow of a fluid and swim upstream.
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MathEvidence-based medicine lacks solid supporting evidence
Saving science from its statistical flaws will require radical revision in its methods
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PhysicsMaterial borders support unusually warm electronic superhighways
The interface between a conductive wafer and an iron-containing film is a high-temperature superconductor, which transmits electrons without resistance.
By Andrew Grant -
Health & MedicineSeek Meningitis Vaccine
Excerpt from the November 9, 1963, issue of SCIENCE NEWS LETTER.
By Science News -
MathIn science, popularity breeds unreliability
Popularity can mean unreliability both in science news coverage and within research itself.