Friday, April 29, 2022

Here's Who Should Get a Second COVID Booster

Sponsored by Worcester Polytechnic Institute
    
April 29, 2022

Vaccines

Here's Who Should Get a Second COVID Booster

An individual’s health risks, treatment access and local case levels come into play for those who are eligible

By Esther Landhuis

Oceans

A Major Ocean Current Is at Its Weakest Point in 1,000 Years

Natural variations are currently the main cause, but climate change should continue to cause it to slow down

By Chelsea Harvey,E&E News

Engineering

Record-Breaking Jumping Robot Can Leap a 10-Story Building

To propel itself higher than any known engineered jumper or animal can, it had to ignore the limits of biology

By Sophie Bushwick

Neuroscience

Brain-Reading Devices Help Paralyzed People Move, Talk and Touch

Implants are becoming more sophisticated—and are attracting commercial interest

By Liam Drew,Nature magazine

Psychology

Darwin Was Wrong: Your Facial Expressions Do Not Reveal Your Emotions

The emotion AI industry, courts and child educators are unknowingly relying on a misunderstanding of Darwin’s ideas

By Lisa Feldman Barrett

Particle Physics

Large Hadron Collider Seeks New Particles after Major Upgrade

Long-awaited boosts to the world’s most powerful collider could spur breakthroughs in the hunt for physics beyond the Standard Model

By Daniel Garisto

Genetics

Dogs' Personalities Aren't Determined by Their Breed

A new genetic study shows generalizing breeds as affectionate or aggressive doesn’t hold up

By Jack Tamisiea

Cancer

How to Tell whether a Cancer Is Caused by Plain Bad Luck

A new study offers a possible answer to the question “Why me?”

By Viviane Callier

Climate Change

Climate Change Is Shrinking Animals, Especially Bird-Brained Birds

As the world warms, many animals are getting smaller. For birds, new research shows what they have upstairs may just make a different in how much smaller they get.

By Shahla Farzan | 04:00

Space Exploration

Europe Cancels Joint Moon Missions with Russia

Russia will move forward with lunar exploration without its European partners

By Leonard David

History

Offensive Names Should Be Removed from Public Lands

Efforts to change problematic names, whether on federal, state or local lands, are steps toward justice and reconciliation

By Bonnie McGill

Ecology

Cities Build Better Biologists

Urban environments naturally train critical thinkers and observational experts who are the future of ecology

By Nyeema C. Harris
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BRING SCIENCE HOME
When a Flashing Light Shows More

Believe what you see? It might depend on your light source. Not all light sources provide our brains with the same information. Whip up this fascinating optical illusion to see for yourself! Credit: George Retseck

Do you have to see it to believe it? You might want to rethink your strategy. Scientists now know that what we perceive can be very different from what is really there. Our brains are quite clever in helping us interact with the world, but they can be fooled. Try this activity, and you will find out how!

Try This Experiment
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Scientist Pankaj

Today in Science: Humans think unbelievably slowly

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