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Is Estrogen the New Ritalin?

Scientific American Online - Fri, 2010-04-16 14:00

Big test coming up? Having trouble concentrating? Try a little estrogen.

Neuroscientists at the University of California, Berkeley, report in a recent study that hormone fluctuations during a woman’s menstrual cycle may affect the brain as much as do substances such as caffeine, methamphetamines or the popular attention drug Ritalin.

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Recommended: Rare: Portraits of America's Endangered Species

Scientific American Online - Fri, 2010-04-16 13:00

Rare: Portraits of America’s Endangered Species by Joel Sartore. National Geographic Focal Point, 2010

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Invading Species Carrying Parasites Have Healthy Appetites

Scientific American Online - Fri, 2010-04-16 12:07

Invasive species can decrease biodiversity and drive resident species to the brink of extinction. But how do these interlopers fare so well in unfamiliar territory? One idea is that they’ve escaped their enemies, for example, the parasites that keep them in check on their home turf. But a study in the journal Biology Letters [Jaimie Dick et al., http://bit.ly/dnRRRl ] suggests that notion doesn’t always stand up. Because at least one kind of invasive shrimp is an even bigger pest when it has a parasite on board. [More]

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Obama predicts Mars mission

Scientific American Online - Thu, 2010-04-15 23:30
President Barack Obama traveled to Cape Canaveral, Florida and told skeptical NASA employees he is committed to America's future role in space. Jon Decker reports.
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Roman ingots to shield particle detector

Scientific American Online - Thu, 2010-04-15 23:14

By Nicola Nosengo

Around four tons of ancient Roman lead was yesterday transferred from a museum on the Italian island of Sardinia to the country's national particle physics laboratory at Gran Sasso on the mainland. [More]

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Health insurers make big bucks from Big Macs

Scientific American Online - Thu, 2010-04-15 23:10

Like most businesses, health and life insurance companies are out to make a buck, and one way they augment their income is by investing in other industries. [More]

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Obama's Goals for Space Exploration Include a Manned Mission to Mars Orbit in the 2030s

Scientific American Online - Thu, 2010-04-15 23:00

President Obama laid out his timeline and destinations for manned space exploration during a speech Thursday, a blueprint that includes a trip to Mars orbit and back in the 2030s. At the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, Obama pledged his commitment to the space agency and to manned exploration of the solar system, at a time when his controversial budget proposal for NASA awaits approval from Congress. [More]

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Icelandic volcano eruption intensifies

Scientific American Online - Thu, 2010-04-15 22:55

By Omar Valdimarsson

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Warm Water Flowed Through Supercomputers to Cool Down Their Heat

Scientific American Online - Thu, 2010-04-15 22:30

Today's supercomputers run hot, thanks to power-hungry microprocessors that enable sophisticated scientific research and complex financial transactions to be performed in the blink of an eye. As these microprocessors have become smaller and more powerful over time , they are generating even more heat, a problem that data centers generally address expensively with air conditioning and chilled-liquid cooling systems. [More]

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How Long Will Iceland's Volcano Keep Planes Grounded?

Scientific American Online - Thu, 2010-04-15 21:10

Fire and ice have created a doubly dangerous and disruptive volcanic disaster in Iceland that is being felt around the world as locals are evacuated and thousands of flights to and from Northern and Western Europe have been grounded. [More]

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Motivated Multitasking: How the Brain Keeps Tabs on Two Tasks at Once

Scientific American Online - Thu, 2010-04-15 20:35

The human brain is considered to be pretty quick, but it lacks many of qualities of a super-efficient computer. For instance, we have trouble switching between tasks and cannot seem to actually do more than one thing at a time. So despite the increasing options --and demands--to multitask, our brains seem to have trouble keeping tabs on many activities at once . [More]

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Iceland volcano eruption intensifies

Scientific American Online - Thu, 2010-04-15 20:31
A volcanic eruption in Iceland, which has thrown up a 6-km (3.7 mile) high plume of ash and disrupted air traffic across northern Europe has grown more intense.
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Quantum Effects Exploited to Generate Random Numbers

Scientific American Online - Thu, 2010-04-15 17:45

A team of researchers has devised perhaps the world's most intricate coin toss, a device utilizing vacuum chambers, magnetic fields, lasers and microwave pulses to produce a random string of 0s and 1s--each representing heads or tails, essentially. The complexity is necessary to move the generation of random numbers beyond the hard-to-predict but fundamentally deterministic world of classical physics and into the realm of quantum mechanics, where uncertainty takes hold. [More]

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Don't eat that: Endangered quolls may benefit from aversion therapy

Scientific American Online - Thu, 2010-04-15 17:00

Eat something that's bad for you and you get sick, effectively teaching you to never eat that thing again. But if you eat something that kills you, there's not much room left for learning, is there?

That's the problem in Australia, where the endangered northern quoll ( Dasyurus hallucatus ), a small, cat-sized marsupial , has been driven to near-extinction by eating poisonous cane toads ( Bufo marinus ). Now some scientists are trying to help quolls, and maybe other species, by teaching them that cane toads are not food and should be avoided.

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Synchrotron Focuses on New Hominid Fossil

Scientific American Online - Thu, 2010-04-15 16:02

Last week, scientists announced the discovery of a remarkably well-preserved skeleton of what might be a new species of an ancient hominid that lived almost 2 million years ago. [See Kate Wong, http://bit.ly/dehy9Q ]

The bones were found in 2008. This February, they were analyzed by one of the highest-tech tools available, the synchrotron at the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility in Grenoble, France. The device uses beams of x-rays a trillion times brighter than medical x-rays, and produces images at the atomic level.

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Is Reprocessing the Answer to Eliminating Fissile Materials from Bombs and Nuclear Waste?

Scientific American Online - Thu, 2010-04-15 16:00

President Obama promised to eliminate 34 tons of plutonium from the U.S. nuclear weapons program as part of this week's nuclear security summit. But how does one actually get rid of bomb-making material that has a half-life of more than 20,000 years? [More]

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Readers Respond to "How Science Can Help You Fall in Love"--And More...

Scientific American Online - Thu, 2010-04-15 14:00

HATING “LOVE” After reading Robert Epstein’s article “ How Science Can Help You Fall in Love ,” I had to go back to the cover and verify that the word “scientific” was indeed part of the title of your magazine. The “Love-Building Exercises” he recommends are more appropriate to a magazine of fantasy and science fiction: [More]

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'My Brain Made Me Do It'

Scientific American Online - Thu, 2010-04-15 05:00

 

At age 22, Eliezer Sternberg has just published his second book on neuroscience and philosophy: “My Brain Made Me Do It,” now out from Prometheus Books. In it, he argues that our growing understanding of how the brain works does not mean the end of moral responsibility. Rather, he sees free will as a special property that emerges from more basic brain functions. A student at Tufts Medical School, he took time out from his first-year exams to talk with Mind Matters co-editor Carey Goldberg. [More]

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Technological Advances Bring Exoplanets into Clearer View

Scientific American Online - Wed, 2010-04-14 21:05

In late 2008 two teams made waves with the simultaneous announcement that they had managed to directly photograph planets in orbit around distant stars, also known as exoplanets. Although hundreds of exoplanets had already been found orbiting sun-like stars throughout the Milky Way, they had been discovered by indirect means--astronomers had inferred the presence of a planet by observing the dimming effects or gravitational wobble an orbiting companion induces on its parent star. In a few other cases a candidate planet had been observed near a star but had not been proved to follow a planet-like orbit. [More]

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Genetic Engineering No Match for Evolution of Weed Resistance

Scientific American Online - Wed, 2010-04-14 20:30

Resistance to glyphosate, a herbicide more popularly known as Roundup, has been rising among weeds across the American Southeast that are growing among genetically engineered crops, according to a report released today by the National Research Council .

"Weed resistance is so bad in Georgia that GE cotton is no longer being used as much," said LaReesa Wolfenbarger , a co-author of the report and associate professor of biology at the University of Nebraska. The committee presented its work at the National Academy of Sciences today.

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