Humans

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We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.

More Stories in Humans

  1. Health & Medicine

    A new cholesterol-lowering pill shows promise in clinical trials

    The drug enlicitide reduced cholesterol for adults with high levels due to an inherited disorder and may also work for a broader population.

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  2. Science & Society

    Why do we feel starved for time? New research offers answers

    Interruptions, to-do lists, lack of autonomy — “time poverty” depends more on perceived shortages of time than actual ones, recent research suggests.

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  3. Animals

    This fly’s flesh-eating maggot is making a comeback. Here’s what to know 

    After a decades-long hiatus, new world screwworm populations have surged in Central America and Mexico — and are inching northward.

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  4. Neuroscience

    To decode future anxiety and depression, begin with a child’s brain

    A child-friendly brain imaging technique is just one way neuroscientist Cat Camacho investigates how children learn to process emotions.

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  5. Archaeology

    Peru’s Serpent Mountain sheds its mysterious past

    No, aliens had nothing to do with a winding 1.5-kilometer-long path of holes. First used as a market, the Inca then repurposed it for tax collection.

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  6. Artificial Intelligence

    As teens in crisis turn to AI chatbots, simulated chats highlight risks

    From blaming the victim to replying "I have no interest in your life" to suicidal thoughts, AI chatbots can respond unethically when used for therapy.

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  7. Health & Medicine

    Volunteers agreed to be buried face-down in the snow, for science

    A safety device helped maintain a buried person’s oxygen levels for up to 35 minutes, tests show, buying crucial time for an avalanche rescue.

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  8. Health & Medicine

    Cancer treatments may get a boost from mRNA COVID vaccines

    Cancer patients who got an mRNA COVID vaccine within a few months of their immunotherapy lived longer than those who did not, health records show.

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  9. Anthropology

    Two tiny genetic shifts helped early humans walk upright

    Scientists have linked bipedalism to changes in how the human pelvis developed millions of years ago.

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