-
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
|
May 22, 2012 |
-
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
|
May 8, 2012 |
-
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
|
May 3, 2012 |
-
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
|
Apr 10, 2012 |
-
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
|
Apr 3, 2012 |
-
News
| Health
There are no plans to create human chimeras, a researcher emphasized. This research by itself should help with biomedical studies more relevant to humans
By
Jeanna Bryner
,
Stephanie Pappas
and
LiveScience
|
Jan 6, 2012 |
-
News
| Health
The study suggests that there are other important health reasons why oral contraceptives should be readily available to millions of women
By
Jeanna Bryner
and
LiveScience
|
Nov 17, 2011 |