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Carrots, Mice, Monkeys and AIDS, Oh My
Why isn’t there an AIDS vaccine? Between mice and monkeys, the answer soon may be, ‘There is.’
You Are What Your Mother Worried About
A study of rats shows that when a mother experiences some form of trauma even before her pregnancy begins, it will still influence her offspring’s behavior.
A New Weapon Against Staph Infections
A new sheriff in town is gunning for drug-resistant staph infections, but this sheriff is very, very small.
The IV Danger
When you’re hooked up to an IV, are you receiving only fluids? Or is there something more harmful in there?
Who Needs Stem Cells, Anyway?
By understanding how cell specialization is regulated, scientists could be able to convert one cell type into another, rendering the harvesting of stem cells from embryonic tissue unnecessary.
Milk Does a (Rat’s) Body Good
It turns out it really does matter whether you’ve ‘got milk.’
Genetics May Play Role in Alcohol-Related Birth Defects
Genetics may help explain why the children of some women who drink alcohol during pregnancy have birth defects and others do not.
This Is Your Brain on Pot … No, Really
This is not just a pipe dream: The brain apparently does make its own marijuana.
A Better Way to Anesthetize?
Researchers have created a new system of slow-release delivery for anesthetic drugs, producing long-lasting local anesthesia in rats without signs of toxicity in their nerve or muscle cells.
Of Hearing Loss in Mice and Men
Progressive hearing loss, a common but poorly understood condition, is related to a newly discovered gene that affects the sensory hair cells in the inner ear.
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Children’s Books Increasingly Ignore Natural World
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Casual Sex: Men, Women Not So Different After All
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Prop Planes: The Future of Eco-Friendly Aviation?
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Are Some Airlines Just Too Dangerous to Fly?
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Pressure to Conform Can Inspire Creativity
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Japan's Earthquake: Deciphering the Fury
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Five Orcas, Five Slaves or Five Persons?
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The Real Science Gap
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Learning to Read When a School System Falters
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The Perceived Delicacy of the Female Conductor
from the source
Gender Wage Gap Skewed By Survey Flaws
The wage gap between the sexes in America has been closing much faster than anyone realized, but that’s tempered by learning it’s been much wider than measurements had shown.
‘Orcas as Slaves’ Argument Sinks
An effort to identify five performing orcas as slaves failed in part, argues one scholar, because there’s no legal precedent establishing them as persons.
The Perceived Delicacy of the Female Conductor
New research finds listeners judge symphonic music differently when they’re told the conductor is a woman.
House Puts Transportation in Partisan Crossfire
Transportation used to be one of the few guaranteed areas of agreement when ideology trumped pragmatism in D.C. But that’s no longer the case.
Pressure to Conform Can Inspire Creativity
New research suggests less-creative people do more innovative thinking when they are told individualism is the norm, and instructed to conform.
Better Super Bowl Makes for Better Ads
A lot of people say they watch the Super Bowl mostly for the ads. But it turns out a good game surrounding those ads makes them seem better.
Overseas Troops Finally Get Fair Shot at Voting
After decades of obstacles hindering the voting process, new laws will allow overseas and military voters to submit their votes in time for the 2012 election.
Neglected Tropical Diseases Neglected No More?
World health leaders announce coordinated push to eradicate or control neglected tropical diseases.
Children’s Books Increasingly Ignore Natural World
A survey of award-winning children’s picture books from 1938 to 2008 suggests our increasing estrangement from the natural environment.
Traffic Solution: Make Drivers Less Lonely
Rather than moaning about too many cars on the road, the Ridesharing Institute says the real key to battling traffic congestion and pollution is filling empty passenger seats.


