Wednesday, February 16, 2022

How COVID Changed the World

Trouble viewing? View in your browser.
View all Scientific American publications.
    
February 15, 2022

Public Health

How COVID Changed the World

Lessons from two years of emergency science, upheaval and loss

Sociology

How a Virus Exposed the Myth of Rugged Individualism

Humans evolved to be interdependent, not self-sufficient

By Robin G. Nelson

Climate Change

Lichens Could Need More than a Million Years to Adapt to Climate Change

The composite organisms, formed from the symbiotic relationship between fungi and algae, are crucial members of myriad ecosystems

By Jack Tamisiea

Medicine

These Eye Drops Could Replace Your Reading Glasses

Solutions to age-related vision problems now come in a bottle. How well do they work?

By Charles Schmidt

Public Health

Introducing 21 Ways COVID Changed the World

The pandemic didn't bring us together, but it did show us what we need to change the most

By Jen Schwartz

Vaccines

Tracking Outbreaks Through Sewers, and Kids' Vaccines on Hold Again | COVID Quickly, Episode 24

Today we bring you a new episode in our podcast series COVID, Quickly. Every two weeks, Scientific American's senior health editors Tanya Lewis and Josh Fischman catch you up on the essential developments in the pandemic: from vaccines to new variants and everything in between.

You can listen to all past episodes here.

By Tanya Lewis,Josh Fischman,Jeffery DelViscio | 06:03

Climate Change

Western 'Megadrought' Is the Worst in 1,200 Years

An exceptionally dry year in 2021 pushed the 22-year-long drought to the top of the record books

By Chelsea Harvey,E&E News

Genetics

First Gene Therapy for Tay-Sachs Disease Successfully Given to Two Children

About 1 in 300 people in the general population carry the Tay-Sachs disease gene

By Miguel Sena-Esteves,The Conversation US

Artificial Intelligence

Humans Find AI-Generated Faces More Trustworthy Than the Real Thing

Viewers struggle to distinguish images of sophisticated machine-generated faces from actual humans

By Emily Willingham

Defense

Russia-Ukraine Conflict Prompted U.S. to Develop Autonomous Drone Swarms, 1,000-Mile Cannon

The U.S. military has new technology on the drawing board in response to warfare trends previously demonstrated in the region

By Jason Sherman

Public Health

Guinea Worm Disease Nears Eradication

Just 14 cases of the scourge that once infected millions of the world's poorest people were reported last year. But infections in animals complicates efforts to stamp it out

By Freda Kreier,Nature magazine

Physiology

How Olympic Figure Skaters Break Records with Physics

An exercise scientist explains the biomechanics behind jumps such as the quadruple Axel, and what the body's limits are

By Tanya Lewis

Psychology

The Personality Trait 'Intolerance of Uncertainty' Causes Anguish during COVID

High levels of it have put people at risk of emotional problems 

By Francine Russo
FROM THE STORE

ADVERTISEMENT

FROM THE ARCHIVE

How COVID Changed Science

What is unprecedented is not just the speed and focus with which the community responded to the pandemic but also the singular willingness of scientists all over the world to share new ideas and data immediately and transparently

QUOTE OF THE DAY

"We assembled this collection of stories to reflect on how COVID has already changed our world, as well as how our world has been resistant to change--even when a virus disrupts everything, even when it shows us what we need to change the most."

Jen Schwartz, senior editor of features at Scientific American

LATEST ISSUES

Questions?   Comments?

Send Us Your Feedback
Download the Scientific American App
Download on the App Store
Download on Google Play

To view this email as a web page, go here.

You received this email because you opted-in to receive email from Scientific American.

To ensure delivery please add news@email.scientificamerican.com to your address book.

Unsubscribe     Manage Email Preferences     Privacy Policy     Contact Us

Scientist Pankaj

Today in Science: Humans think unbelievably slowly

...