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Mind Matters 3/13/10
Keeping Love Alive: Scientific American Does Its Part -
Observations 3/13/10
Advances in disease surveillance: Putting the 'public' into public health -
News 3/12/10
Consciousness-Raising: Kick-Starting the Brain's Dopamine System May Revive Some Vegetative Patients -
60-Second Science 3/12/10
Mine Injuries Rise Right After Daylight Saving Time
Features
3/12/10
6 Fun Facts about the James Webb Space Telescope [Slide Show]
The mammoth infrared observatory, scheduled to launch in 2014, will look back to the first stars in the universe
- World Changing Ideas Video Contest
- Innovation is the key to a better future. Enter your own World Changing Ideas videos in our contest. For examples, see "World Changing Ideas," Scientific American; December 2009.
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Scientific American Mind posted 3/12/10
Gene Target Beats Oil Remedy -
Scientific American Mind posted 3/12/10
MIND Reviews: The Other Brain -
Scientific American Magazine posted 3/12/10
Readers Respond on "A Path to Sustainable Energy by 2030" -
Reuters posted 3/11/10
Sushi chef, restaurant charged with serving whale -
News posted 3/11/10
Researchers Gain New Insights into the Mystery of Thalidomide-Caused Birth Defects - More >
- Blogs & Opinion
- Extinction Countdown
Report: Climate change is taking a toll on U.S. bird populations - Observations
Advances in disease surveillance: Putting the "public" into public health - Observations
Software behaving badly: Machine learning could resolve issues raised by multi-core processors - Observations
Condoms for the World Cup and other ways to keep HIV at bay - Bering in Mind
If Darwin were a sports psychologist: Evolution and athletics - More >
- Podcasts
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60-Second Earth
Who Is to Blame for Global Greenhouse Gas Emissions?
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60-Second Science
Mine Injuries Rise Right after Daylight Saving Time
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60-Second Science
Arranged Marriages Can Be Real Love Connection
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- Mind Matters
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Keeping Love Alive: Scientific American Does Its Part
With half of all first marriages ending in divorce, how can we build lasting relationships? A Scientific American event explores the science of love. - More Mind Matters >
- Extreme Tech
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World's Mightiest Solar Boat Unveiled
The PlanetSolar catamaran will circumnavigate the globe in 120 days running on nothing but the sun's energy - More Extreme Tech >
- Ask the Experts
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Why Would a Trained Orca Kill a Human?
After an experienced trainer was pulled in and killed by an orca at SeaWorld, a wildlife biologist who studies the species explains how a killer whale's natural behavior might help shed light on what happened - More Ask the Experts >
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Scientific American Magazine 3/12/10
Readers Respond on "A Path to Sustainable Energy by 2030"
Letters to the editor from the November 2009 issue of Scientific American -
Extinction Countdown 15 hours ago
Report: Climate change is taking a toll on U.S. bird populations
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News 3/10/10
IPCC Errors Prompt Review by International Science Academies
Is there a better way to compile and review climate science? -
Observations 3/13/10
Advances in disease surveillance: Putting the "public" into public health
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News 3/11/10
Researchers Gain New Insights into the Mystery of Thalidomide-Caused Birth Defects
Despite a history of causing fetal malformations, thalidomide is FDA-approved for some conditions, so clues are welcome as to how the drug, formerly used as a sedative and now for immunomodulatory therapy, works -
Observations 3/12/10
Condoms for the World Cup and other ways to keep HIV at bay
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Features 3/10/10
TB or Not TB?: Novel Detector Could Shorten Testing Times, Aid Treatment Efforts
University of Colorado researchers have developed a device for use in the field that can identify both active tuberculosis infection and dormant microbes, which could flare up into full-blown illness -
Reuters 3/11/10
Sushi chef, restaurant charged with serving whale
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Methane Leaks off Siberian Coast, Speeding Climate Change
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Another reason vitamin D is important: It gets T cells going
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A need for new nukes? "Modular reactors" for energy attract interest
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Does the U.S. Produce Too Many Scientists?American science education lags behind that of many other nations, right? So why does it produce so many talented young researchers who cannot find a job in their chosen field of study?
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