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Blog / Say It Ain’t So, Joe!

April 5, 2016 / Nathan Rodeberg /

As a huge Minnesota Twins fan, I was sad to hear that former catcher and current first baseman Joe Mauer is still reporting concussion-related vision problems. These symptoms stem from…

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Medicine Scientific Communication

Blog / Avoiding the blank stare: workshop at UNC helps researchers communicate their work to the public

April 3, 2016 / Alissa Brown /

From graduate students to faculty members, scientific researchers generally receive training in writing technical documents. Usually these documents are intended to communicate findings to other scientists.

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Science Communication Series Scientific Communication Scientific Process SWAC Seminar

Blog / Eat Plastic? Don’t Mind if I Do!

March 31, 2016 / Chris Givens /

Humans do not find plastic bottles tasty. Try as we might, ingestion and digestion of an Auquafina bottle makes for a bad dinner. On the other hand, some bacteria see…

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Biology Chemistry Environmental Science Evolutionary Biology Microbiology

Blog / Puff, Puff, Pass the Pufferfish: Drug Use in the Animal Kingdom

March 30, 2016 / Deirdre Sackett /

Drug use is a fairly common, oftentimes problematic issue among humans. However, Homo sapiens isn’t the only species that likes to experiment with mind-altering substances. In the animal world, many…

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Animal Behavior Drug Abuse Weird Science

Blog / The Massive Signaling Network in Your Skeleton

March 28, 2016 / Nicholas Hanne /

Biologists often encounter mind-bending expansion in complexity the closer they look into the details. Notable examples include the length of DNA strands in each human cell (2-3 meters per cell,…

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Biology

Blog / Devoured: The textile chemistry behind devoré

March 24, 2016March 24, 2016 / Sarah Marks /

With the season finale of Downton Abbey earlier this month, I know everyone is thinking, “Now, how will I get my fix of period costuming”? If you’re like me, you…

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Chemistry Science Art

Blog / Say It Ain’t So, Joe!

March 22, 2016June 15, 2017 / Nathan Rodeberg /

As a huge Minnesota Twins fan, I was sad to hear that former catcher and current first baseman Joe Mauer is still reporting concussion-related vision problems. These symptoms stem from…

Continue Reading
brain concussion Neuroscience Science News

Blog / Glass Half-Full: How Positive Thinking Promotes Success and Well-Being

March 22, 2016March 22, 2016 / Rachel Haake /

As many young academics very well know, science can bum you out. Experiments fail, equipment breaks, and funding opportunities are few and far between. Even when experiments run smoothly, the…

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Biology Evolutionary Biology Graduate School Psychology UNC-CH Research

Blog / Horny Frogs and the Fungal Love Potion

March 21, 2016 / Melissa Plooster / 1

Imagine a pathogen that makes its host more sexually active. It may not kill its host right away. It may not kill its host at all. It is easy to…

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Biology Scientific Communication Weird Science

Blog / Why Bubbles in Guinness Sink

March 17, 2016March 17, 2016 / Margaret Jones /

If you opt for a Guinness this St. Patrick’s Day, keep an eye on your pint as it settles (which, according to official Guinness standards should happen for exactly 119.5 seconds…

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Blog / The Physics Behind the Newest OK Go Video

March 15, 2016October 7, 2019 / Josh Fuchs /

I first heard of the band OK Go when they released their music video for ‘Here It Goes Again,’ which features the band members cruising back and forth over treadmills.…

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Everyday Questions Feature Article Not so Frivolous Physics

Blog / Statistically significant insults for the soul: p < 0.05

March 8, 2016March 9, 2016 / Bailey Peck /

Author’s forward There are days in which a scientist finds herself needing to express her “mean genes.” When an experimental control fails, when Reviewer 3 sinks a paper, when someone…

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Graduate School Science Fail

Blog / New Perspectives on The Scientific Method

March 3, 2016March 2, 2016 / Tamara Vital /

The giant whiteboard outside our lab has a simple to do list: Plan the experiments to answer all the questions Be better This list is a joke, of course, but…

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Graduate School Scientific Process

Blog / Expecting the Football Blues

March 1, 2016March 1, 2016 / Deirdre Sackett /

Following the Super Bowl, millions of football fans suddenly exhibit mood swings and odd behaviors. Symptoms include flipping aimlessly through TV channels on Sunday afternoons or a sudden obsession with…

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Everyday Questions Psychology Scientific Communication

Blog / The Scientific Chronicles – Dream decoded

February 29, 2016March 1, 2016 / Aatish Thennavan / 1

“Dreaming is an act of pure imagination, attesting in all men a creative power, which if it were available in waking, would make every man a Dante or Shakespeare” –…

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Everyday Questions Neurophysiology Not so Frivolous Psychology Weird Science

Blog / Biology and Physics Meet in the Middle

February 24, 2016March 3, 2016 / Lydia Morris / 1

Scientists thrive on “aha” moments— breakthroughs in knowledge that come from careful planning or perhaps fortuitous luck. For a team of researchers led by Josh Lawrimore, a fourth-year graduate student…

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Biology Feature Article Genetics Physics Scientists UNC-CH Research

Blog / Four Bad Graphs, and How to be a Better “Citizen Statistician”

February 22, 2016October 7, 2019 / Alissa Brown /

Statistics. Ugh. Why force-feed such a dreary topic to countless innocent students across the globe? Well, statistics is actually an outrageously important field of study. People make graphs to summarize…

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Scientific Communication Scientific Process Statistics

Blog / Matters of the Heart

February 14, 2016February 15, 2016 / Christina M. Marvin /

Valentine’s Day is today and it’s incredibly common to see public places decorated with paper hearts and store shelves packed with heart-shaped candy. Hearts are a universal representation of love, but…

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Biology Everyday Questions

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