Life

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We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.

More Stories in Life

  1. Neuroscience

    A tiny part of your brain may still listen under anesthesia

    Tones, oddball sounds and words can spark brain cell responses, hinting at nuanced processing without consciousness.

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  2. Animals

    Homing pigeons may use a surprising navigation mechanism

    How animals navigate by Earth's magnetic field is hotly debated. New research in pigeons points to iron-laden liver immune cells as the compass.

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  3. Life

    Can DEET attract mosquitoes? A lab study offers clues

    Lab experiments suggest mosquitoes can smell DEET and learn to associate it with food, but it’s unclear whether that happens in the wild.

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  4. Health & Medicine

    Why is hantavirus so deadly? It’s not what you may think

    Andes hantavirus causes deadly lung failure, but its method of attack differs from other respiratory illnesses. The details might inform future treatments.

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  5. Animals

    Even careful scuba divers can damage coral reefs

    Hours of diving videos and hundreds of survey responses reveal the common diver mistakes that can cause irreversible reef damage.

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  6. Animals

    Seabirds weren’t fooled by a scarecrow-like buoy with rotating eyes

    A tall buoy with a rotating pair of eyes was supposed to scare birds away from caught fish. Like scarecrows, it didn't work for long.

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  7. Health & Medicine

    How to scout a safe summer swimming hole

    Best practices, including checking public E. coli reports and keeping your head above water can keep you safe while swimming.

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  8. Health & Medicine

    What freediving can reveal about human health — and our limits

    The practice of freediving is teaching physiologists how humans stretch their physical and mental limits, which in turn may improve treatments for lung and heart ailments.

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  9. Animals

    AI-powered whale-spotting tech may help save San Francisco Bay’s gray whales

    An AI trained to use thermal images to detect whale body heat could help warn ships at risk of colliding with the marine mammals.

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