Humans

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We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.

More Stories in Humans

  1. Archaeology

    A new study questions when people first reached South America

    Data suggest people lived at Chile’s Monte Verde site thousands of years later than thought, challenging key “pre-Clovis” evidence. Not all agree.

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  2. Health & Medicine

    Are pig organs the future of transplantation?

    Each year, thousands of people in the U.S. die waiting for donated organs. A new book shares how organs from other species could change that.

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  3. Health & Medicine

    Smartwatch data can be used to assess early diabetes risk

    When combined with clinical markers, smartwatch data was able to help detect insulin resistance with nearly 90 percent accuracy.

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  4. Climate

    Extreme heat is cutting the time people can safely be active outdoors

    Heat and humidity now severely limit light physical activity for millions of people around the world, with older adults facing the greatest burden.

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  5. Neuroscience

    Yaks may hint at a way to treat brain diseases like MS

    A genetic mutation tied to keeping the brain healthy at high altitudes may point to a way to repair nerve damage, experiments in mice show.

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  6. Health & Medicine

    A newfound blood biomarker may one day predict longevity

    Levels of six RNA molecules in the blood ID’d older adults likely to survive two more years. Whether it will work for other people is a big question.

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  7. Climate

    Why we fail to notice climate change

    People quickly normalize extreme weather. Simple visuals highlighting abrupt change could help climate change break through our mental blind spots.

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  8. Health & Medicine

    AI may be giving teens bad nutrition advice

    AI-generated meal plans for fictional teens cut an entire meal’s worth of calories and carbs while overemphasizing protein and fats, a new study reports.

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  9. Health & Medicine

    ‘Smart underwear’ measures how often humans fart

    “Zen digesters” rarely fart. “Hydrogen hyperproducers” fart a lot. Scientists are investigating what is typical.

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