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News
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Ancient Pompeii’s political elite vied for advertising space on the “private walls” of wealthy citizens
By
Stephanie Pappas
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LiveScience
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Jan 11, 2013 |
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News
| Mind & Brain
Evolution might underlie the different processing of female versus male bodies. Both genders do it
By
Stephanie Pappas
and
LiveScience
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Jul 25, 2012 |
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News
| Mind & Brain
Mere minutes of therapy quieted brain regions that process fear. Six months later, those areas remained less active than before therapy
By
Jeanna Bryner
and
LiveScience
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May 22, 2012 |
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News
| Mind & Brain
New fMRI images of unsedated dogs represent a first peak into what dogs are thinking and open a door into canine cognition and social cognition in other species
By
Jeanna Bryner
and
LiveScience
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May 8, 2012 |
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News
| Evolution
Compression fossils reveal that these Mesozoic insects with serrated mouthparts were 10 times bigger than today's fleas, but lacked jumping legs
By
Jeanna Bryner
and
LiveScience
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May 3, 2012 |
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News
| Energy & Sustainability
Whereas global warming devastates most coral, it also is predicted to bring a stronger deep equatorial undercurrent that could create a bit of habitat alongside islands
By
Wynne Parry
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LiveScience
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May 1, 2012 |
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News
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It's just the second new particle to be discovered at the atom smasher where physicists also seek the elusive Higgs boson particle
By
Clara Moskowitz
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LiveScience
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May 1, 2012 |
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News
| Mind & Brain
The visual-spatial demands of playing Tetris disrupt the formation of the mental imagery involved in flashbacks
By
Robin Nixon
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LiveScience
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Apr 25, 2012 |
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News
| Mind & Brain
A blood test based on 11 genetic markers could make early-onset diagnosis easier and possibly relieve the stigma of depression
By
Jennifer Welsh
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LiveScience
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Apr 18, 2012 |
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News
| Evolution
Chimpanzee nest-building habits could provide clues to what drove humans from the trees
By
Jennifer Welsh
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LiveScience
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Apr 16, 2012 |
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News
| Mind & Brain
The time needed for us to reach consensus on a color name falls into a hierarchy that matches the human vision system's sensitivity to red over blue, and so on
By
Charles Q. Choi
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LiveScience
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Apr 16, 2012 |
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News
| Mind & Brain
A new computer simulation support a long-held theory that social interactions may have triggered brain evolution in human ancestors
By
Stephanie Pappas
and
LiveScience
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Apr 11, 2012 |
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News
| Mind & Brain
A new analysis of implicit bias and explicit sexual orientation statements may help to explain the underpinnings of anti-gay bullying and hate crimes
By
Jeanna Bryner
and
LiveScience
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Apr 10, 2012 |
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News
| Evolution
The confiscated wooden covers are adorned with hieroglyphics and highlight what is a seemingly vast black market for mummies
By
Jeanna Bryner
and
LiveScience
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Apr 3, 2012 |
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News
| Energy & Sustainability
This harmless phenomenon, called a roll cloud, forms where cold air drives low-hanging, moist warm air upward. Cooler temperatures condense the moisture to form clouds. Winds create the rolling effect
By
Stephanie Pappas
and
LiveScience
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Mar 16, 2012 |