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Blog / But first, mental health.

October 16, 2019October 16, 2019 / Alison Earley /

My heart flutters when I submit a paper. My breathing momentarily halts while waiting for highly anticipated results. My palms feel sweaty awaiting questions at conferences during poster presentations. I…

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Anxiety depression first aid Mental Health mental illness

Blog / What’s the deal with Climate Change?

October 14, 2019October 14, 2019 / Jamshaid Shahir /

The latest IPCC report just came out last month, and it does not bode well for the future of our planet. In light of this, why do so many people actively deny global warming and what can we do about it?

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Climate Change global warming Greta Thunberg IPCC

Blog / Tardigrades: Nature’s most extreme survivors

October 12, 2019October 15, 2019 / Amanda Smythers / 1

Waterbears have survived 5 mass extinction events on earth and don’t seem to be going anywhere soon. How do they survive and what does that mean for humans?

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extreme research survival water bears

Blog / A Nutritious Diet: Not What the Doctor Ordered?

October 10, 2019October 10, 2019 / Kaylee Helfrich /

Approximately 1 out of 5 deaths worldwide is due to poor nutrition, and doctors are not adequately trained to counsel their patients on improving their nutrition to ward off disease.

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global health Medicine nutrition physicians

Blog / How do you take your tea? With some plastic?

October 8, 2019October 10, 2019 / Allison Smith /

A recent study found that some tea bags may release billions of microplastics into your tea. This revelation comes at a time that scientists are growing increasingly concerned about the prevalence and potential health effects of microplastics.

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electron microscopy microplastics public health tea

Blog / A Few Nobel Women

October 7, 2019October 7, 2019 / Julia DiFiore / 1

The most prestigious scientific prize is being awarded this week – the Nobel Prize. Who will win? History tells us not to expect many women among the winners and that points to systemic problems in STEM.

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Nobel Prize Women in Science

Blog / Earthquake, Tsunami, and Nuclear Meltdown

October 7, 2019October 14, 2019 / Syed Masood /

The impact of the Fukushima nuclear meltdown tested national radiation safety again after Chernobyl.

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Earthquake japan Meltdown Nuclear Radiation tsunami

Blog / 5 Things You Didn’t Know About Stellar Magnetism

October 2, 2019October 8, 2019 / Liam Jones /

Like the Sun and the Earth, stars have magnetic fields. These magnetic fields are powerful, yet little is known about them.

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astronomy magnetic field magnetism solar star

Blog / Would you trust a computer to categorize you?

October 1, 2019October 7, 2019 / Amala John /

Can computers accurately characterize human beings?

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AI computer Machine Learning Machine Vision Technology

Blog / Most readers loved this blog post

September 30, 2019October 7, 2019 / Rachel Hartman /

Social proof is the idea that when we hear that a lot of people are doing something, we will be more likely to behave similarly. Its effects are widespread and diverse, and you can use it to your advantage.

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blog Psychology Social proof Social psychology wikipedia

Blog / Chemists shine a new light on safer pigments, by accident

August 5, 2019October 2, 2019 / Chiungwei Huang /

A new non-toxic blue pigment in two centuries has just been discovered. Now the team of chemists set out to find a safer red pigment.

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Chemistry color Science News synthetic

Academia / Molds, Mealworms, and Missed Opportunities: How We Think About Young Scientists

August 1, 2019February 2, 2021 / Connor LaMontagne /

It is extremely important for science to be open for everyone but is it open to those who are young? Are we missing out on discoveries because we do not listen to the questions that children ask about science?

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Blogantibiotics science advocacy Science discovery science education Scientists

Blog / First the Moon, Now Mars: A Look at Rocket Science in Reaching the Red Planet

July 29, 2019September 29, 2019 / Bree Iskandar /

Americans reached the moon 50 years ago – what do the next 50 years look like for space exploration and travel?

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Mars rocket science space space travel

Blog / Fungi Join the Fight Against Malaria

July 27, 2019August 5, 2019 / Gabrielle Budziszewski /

Gene-edited fungi have been used to fight against malaria by infecting mosquitoes.

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gene editing GMOs insects Science News

Blog / Are some of us “immune” to genome editing?

July 25, 2019August 1, 2019 / Dominika Trzilova / 1

Crispr-Cas9 seems like a promising system to treat human disease but what if humans are immune to it?

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gene editing Science in the Media Science News

Blog / Transforming Blood Transfusions

July 24, 2019July 31, 2019 / Rachel Cherney / 2

Scientists have found a way for Type A blood cells to be transformed into Type O ‘universal donor’ blood cells which could be very useful for future blood transfusions.

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bacteria blood Breakthrough science Medicine microbes Science News

Blog / Sleep Your Way to Better Health

July 22, 2019July 29, 2019 / Julia DiFiore /

Sleep is not only important for cognitive function but overall health as well.

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Health Memory Obesity Sleep

Blog / 30 Years Post Nuclear Meltdown

July 18, 2019July 25, 2019 / Syed Masood /

Pressure increasing, emergency sirens ringing, water in the cooling tanks superheating. 9:27:40 AM UTC April 26, 1986: a planned safety test was conducted to assess the cooling circulation system in…

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Caesium Disaster Iodine Mutations Radiation Russia Strontium

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