-
Scientific American Magazine
| Health
New sleep aids block the activity of brain peptides called orexins, which play a role in addiction
By
Christine Soares
|
Jul 1, 2010 |
-
Scientific American Magazine
| Technology
How your genes could reveal what you look like
By
Christine Soares
|
May 11, 2010
-
Scientific American Magazine
| Health
How the legacy of the vicious 1918 outbreak led to today's comparatively tame swine flu
By
Christine Soares
|
Oct 9, 2009 |
-
Features
| Health
The "fiasco" of 1976, which saw the launch of a national vaccination program for an epidemic that never emerged, may be paying off today
By
Christine Soares
|
Sep 11, 2009 |
-
Scientific American Magazine
| More Science
Where do rainbows come from? What about flying cars, love and LSD?
By
Davide Castelvecchi
,
Graham P. Collins
,
Bruce Grierson
,
Mara Hvistendahl
,
Jonathon Keats
,
Michael Moyer
,
George Musser
,
Christie Nicholson
,
Ricki Rusting
,
Jessica Snyder Sachs
,
Christine Soares
,
Gary Stix
,
Kate Wong
,
Melinda Wenner
and
Philip Yam
|
Aug 17, 2009 |
-
Scientific American Magazine
| Health
The surveillance of animals for new flu viruses has lagged behind preparations for the human pandemics that can be caused by the bugs
By
Christine Soares
|
Jul 7, 2009 |
-
News
| Health
Could animal surveillance have seen the new flu coming?
By
Christine Soares
|
May 22, 2009
-
Features
| Health
U.S. military researcher uncovers clues about 1918 pandemic flu virus
By
Christine Soares
|
Apr 27, 2009 |
-
Scientific American Magazine
| More Science
Rethinking cancer by seeing tumors as a cellular pregnancy
By
Christine Soares
|
Apr 23, 2009 |
-
Special Editions
| Environment
A California chef and a climate scientist present a recipe for a sustainable diet
By
Christine Soares
|
Mar 17, 2009 |
-
Scientific American Magazine
| Technology
Genome-sequencing contest renews regeneration research
By
Christine Soares
|
Nov 11, 2008 |
-
Scientific American Magazine
| Health
Rocky debut for a nicotine mimic tempers hope for widespread use
By
Christine Soares
|
Aug 27, 2008 |
-
Scientific American Magazine
| Health
Resurrected "jumping gene" could deliver DNA
By
Christine Soares
|
Jul 2, 2008
-
Scientific American Magazine
| More Science
Brazilian neuroscientist Miguel A. L. Nicolelis taps into the chatter of neural populations to drive robotic prosthetics. Now he hopes to tap the potential of his country's population by building them a network of science cities
By
Christine Soares
|
Jan 17, 2008 |
-
Scientific American Magazine
| Technology
This year's SciAm 50 awards are replete with instances of new machines or chemicals that come close to the true meaning of innovation as something entirely new.
By
Mark Alpert
,
Steven Ashley
,
Charles Q. Choi
,
Graham P. Collins
,
Mariette DiChristina
,
Kaspar Mossman
,
George Musser
,
John Rennie
,
Ricki Rusting
,
Peter Sergo
,
Christine Soares
,
Gary Stix
and
Philip Yam
|
Dec 16, 2007 |