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5,121 results for: seek
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EarthSeismology in your backyard (and on your Twitter feed)
With two USGS programs, Twitter, inexpensive seismic equipment transform citizens into scientists.
By Sid Perkins -
LifeCarried aloft, tiny creatures avoid parasites, sex
Dry and blowing in the breeze, rotifers are safe from a deadly fungus — and perhaps from the vulnerabilities presumed to accompany asexual reproduction.
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Health & MedicineHIV self-test proves accurate
Study in an ER shows individuals successfully determined their own HIV status.
By Nathan Seppa -
LifeSpiders love sweet smell of blood perfume
For on spider species, feeding on blood-gorged mosquitoes adds charm to a mate
By Susan Milius -
LifeWhy light makes migraines worse
A new study traces brain wiring to discover why light increases migraine pain.
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AnimalsWhale hunts: Discussions on lifting the ‘ban’
The International Whaling Commission will formally address its future, next week, at a meeting in St. Petersburg, Fla. Once comprised of whaling nations, the IWC now includes member states just as likely to condemn any hunting of cetaceans. That internal tension is guiding the meeting’s agenda. On it’s plate: whether to overturn the organization’s long-standing moratorium on commercial whaling.
By Janet Raloff -
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Health & MedicineMalaria shows signs of resisting best drug used to fight it
The frontline malaria medicine artemisinin shows gaps in effectiveness in Southeast Asia.
By Nathan Seppa -
Health & MedicineGerms in tobacco are potential source of respiratory infections blamed on smoking
Tests find hundreds of bacterial species in major cigarette brands.
By Janet Raloff -
Health & MedicineFewer dopamine receptors makes for risky business
Brain-scanning study in people sees link between personality, dopamine system.
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Birth of the beat
Music’s roots may lie in melodic exchanges between mothers and babies.
By Bruce Bower -
Materials ScienceBreakup doesn’t keep hydrogel down
Scientists create a new material that is strong, soft and self-healing.