Latest from Science News for Students: Chikungunya wings its way north — on mosquitoes

Latest from Science News For Students

09/05/2015

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Body & Health

Chikungunya wings its way north — on mosquitoes

By Nathan Seppa,

A mosquito-borne virus once found only in the tropics has adapted to survive in mosquitoes in cooler places, such as Europe and North America. Read More

Light & Radiation, Physics, Astronomy

Stephen Hawking says his group has solved a black hole puzzle

By Andrew Grant,

Physicist Stephen Hawking says light sliding along the outside of a black hole holds the key to understanding what’s inside. Read More

Animals

Boa constrictors stop their victims’ hearts

By Susan Milius,

It’s a myth that boa constrictors kill by suffocation. A new study shows the snakes actually squeeze off blood flow, stopping the hearts of their prey. Read More

Agriculture, Genetics, Plants

Plant ‘vampires’ lay in wait

By Esther Landhuis,

A new study shows how some parasitic plants evolved the ability to sense a potential host — and then send out root-like structures to feed on them. Read More

Body & Health, Food & Nutrition

News Brief: Stress may break diet willpower

By Laura Sanders,

A new study suggests stress can affect our behavior — and willpower — by making tasty foods look more irresistible. Read More

Inside Student Science

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Latest from Science News: Go to Green Bank to listen to the stars

Latest from Science News

09/03/2015

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Experiences

Go to Green Bank to listen to the stars

BY Sarah Zielinski,

Visitors to the Green Bank Telescope in West Virginia get a close-up with the world’s largest movable land object. Read More

Culture Beaker

Why enforced ‘service with a smile’ should be banned

BY Rachel Ehrenberg,

If management wants workers to maintain false cheer, those workers should be trained, supported and compensated for the emotional labor, a new review suggests. Read More

News

Ancient pottery maps route to South Pacific

BY Bruce Bower,

New Guinea pottery points to a key meeting of island natives and seafarers at least 3,000 years ago. Read More

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Latest from Science News: Nearby quasar may be home to dynamic duo

Latest from Science News

09/01/2015

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Nearby quasar may be home to dynamic duo

BY Christopher Crockett,

A pair of black holes left over from a galaxy collision might live in the nearest quasar to Earth. Read More

Science Ticker

New microscope techniques give deepest view yet of living cells

BY Tina Hesman Saey,

Two new microscopy techniques are helping scientists see smaller structures in living cells than ever glimpsed before. Read More

Science Visualized

How dollhouse crime scenes schooled 1940s cops

BY Helen Thompson,

In the 1940s, Frances Glessner Lee’s dollhouse murder dioramas trained investigators to look at crime scenes through a scientific lens. Read More

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The search for extraterrestrial intelligence, ant personalities, & more

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News from Science

 

Latest News and Headlines

28 August 2015

 

 

 

How termite mounds ‘breathe’
 

 
 

 

 

Where SETI should search for intelligent life
 

 
 

 

 

Top stories: A fusion breakthrough, a ‘winged monster,’ and the evolution of religion
 

 
 

 

 

More evidence to support quantum theory’s ‘spooky action at a distance’
 

 
 

 

 

Massive volcanoes began erupting hundreds of thousands of years before Earth’s largest extinction
 

 
 

 

 

Ants have group-level personalities, study shows
 

 
 

 

 

Women associate money with love, men link it to freedom
 

 
 

 

 

Update: Karolinska Institute clears trachea surgeon of misconduct charges
 

 
 

 

 

Podcast: A debunked dragon, progress toward a universal flu vaccine, and more
 

 
 

 

 

Video: What frogs can teach us about being fooled by decoys
 

 
 

 

 

Piling it even higher and deeper: Grad school woes earn film sequel
 

 
 

 

 

Feature: Why big societies need big gods
 

 
 

 

 

Feature: Turning history into a binary code
 

 
 

 

 

 

 
 

 

   

 

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Editor’s picks: The genome in 4-D, futuristic forensics, quantum spookiness, replication failure, frogs as salesmen, and why it’s hard to stop eating

Science News Editor’s Picks

08/30/15

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Feature

The human genome takes shape and shifts over time

By Sarah Schwartz

Scientists are mapping and modeling the 4-D human genome to get beyond its linear structure. Read More

Feature

Wanted: Crime-solving bacteria and body odor

By Meghan Rosen

Forensic investigators are moving past old-school sleuthing to analyze microbes and odors that tell a more complete story, while pursuing ways to enhance traditional tools as well.  Read More

News

Hawking proposes solution to black hole problem

By Andrew Grant

Light sliding along the boundary of a black hole encodes everything that ever fell inside, suggests Stephen Hawking in a new but incomplete proposal. Read More

News

Decoy switches frogs’ mating call preference

By Sarah Schwartz

A female túngara frog may switch her choice between two prospective mates when presented with a third, least attractive option.  Read More

News

Hurricane’s tiny earthquakes could help forecasters

By Thomas Sumner

Hurricane Sandy set off small earthquakes under its eye as it moved up the U.S. East Coast in 2012. The tiny tremors could help researchers track the behavior of future storms, researchers propose. Read More

Science Visualized

Long-tongued fly sips from afar

By Susan Milius

Long-tongued flies can dabble in shallow blossoms or reach into flowers with roomier nectar tubes. Read More

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Science News Weekly Alert

New Science/AAAS Webinar
Advancing precision medicine through multi-omics: An integrated approach to tumor profiling
Wednesday, September 16, 2015, at 9 a.m. Pacific, 12 noon Eastern, 5 p.m. UK, 6 p.m. Central Europe
Hear the experts discuss how a multi-omics approach to cancer research can advance our understanding of cancer biology and uncover new biomarkers.
Register TODAY: webinar.sciencemag.org
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Science/AAAS News from Science

Weekly Headlines
 

28 August 2015

This week’s news from Science and ScienceInsider

28 August 2015 |
28 August 2015 | BIOLOGY
Changes in temperature between day and night ventilates towering structures
28 August 2015 | SPACE
Galactic interiors could host more suitable planets than their outskirts
28 August 2015 | SCIENTIFIC COMMUNITY
This week’s top Science news
28 August 2015 | PHYSICS
Experiment plugs loopholes in test of weirdest aspect of quantum theory
28 August 2015 | EARTH
Lengthy interval helps explain why species took so long to recover
28 August 2015 | PLANTS ANIMALS
Colonies are bold or shy, traits reflected in their food-foraging strategies
28 August 2015 | BRAIN BEHAVIOR
Study investigates our “pathological” relationship with cold hard cash
28 August 2015 | EUROPE
Vice-Chancellor concludes that independent investigation was based on incomplete information
27 August 2015 | SCIENTIFIC COMMUNITY
Listen to a roundup of some of our favorite stories from the week
27 August 2015 | PLANTS ANIMALS
When it comes to sex, female túngaras chuck rationality out of the pond
27 August 2015 |
27 August 2015 | PEOPLE EVENTS
Jorge Cham, the creator of the comic PHD, discusses bringing his graduate school characters to the big screen again for a sequel
27 August 2015 | ARCHAEOLOGY
A new theory aims to explain the success of world religions—but testing it remains a challenge
27 August 2015 | ARCHAEOLOGY
Scientists struggle to reach across a disciplinary divide to test a new theory about the evolution of religion
27 August 2015 |
27 August 2015 | HEALTH
Scientists discover that a supposedly human-exclusive disease killed zoo animal
26 August 2015 |
26 August 2015 | BIOLOGY
Patterns of resistance reflect those in local human populations
26 August 2015 | BIOLOGY
Superior in size and egg production, this popular pet threatens natives


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Latest from Science News for Students: Nanosilver: Naughty or nice?

Latest from Science News For Students

08/29/2015

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Pollution, Body & Health, Chemistry

Nanosilver: Naughty or nice?

By Sharon Oosthoek,

Nanosilver is in many products, from socks to toothbrushes. The tiny particles kill microbes. But it’s still unclear whether they can harm us or the environment. Read More

Weather & Climate

Beliefs about global warming vary by country

By Teresa Shipley Feldhausen,

Opinions about climate change — whether it exists, what’s causing it and how dangerous it is — vary greatly around the world. Read More

Body & Health, Food & Nutrition, Genetics

DNA: Our ancient ancestors had lots more

By Tina Hesman Saey,

Ancestral humans and their extinct relatives had much more DNA than do people today, a new study finds. It mapped genetic differences over time among 125 different human groups. Read More

Pollution, Body & Health

Can house dust make us fat?

By Beth Mole,

Materials found in dust, including common fats, may trigger human fat cells to grow. This might promote weight gain, some scientists worry. Read More

Animals

Top rooster announces the dawn

By Susan Milius,

Roosters know their places in the chicken world. Lower-ranking birds defer to the guy at the top of the pecking order. And they show it by holding their crows until after he greets the new day. Read More

Inside Student Science

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This Week In Science

New Science/AAAS Webinar
Advancing precision medicine through multi-omics: An integrated approach to tumor profiling
Wednesday, September 16, 2015, at 9 a.m. Pacific, 12 noon Eastern, 5 p.m. UK, 6 p.m. Central Europe
Hear the experts discuss how a multi-omics approach to cancer research can advance our understanding of cancer biology and uncover new biomarkers.
Register TODAY: webinar.sciencemag.org
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Science/AAAS Science

This Week in Science
 

08/28/15 Volume 349, Issue 6251

Editor summaries of this week’s research papers.


This Week in Science

Sexual Selection

Quantum Mechanics

Topological Matter

Synthetic Biology

Nanoparticles

Fungal Symbionts

Mucosal Immunology

Climate Science

Cancer

Colloids

Psychology

Advanced Imaging

Organic Chemistry

Life History

Immunology

Paleontology

Neuronal Development

Heart Disease

DNA Recombination

Solid-State Physics


New Science/AAAS Webinar
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Wednesday, September 16, 2015, at 9 a.m. Pacific, 12 noon Eastern, 5 p.m. UK, 6 p.m. Central Europe
Hear the experts discuss how a multi-omics approach to cancer research can advance our understanding of cancer biology and uncover new biomarkers.
Register TODAY: webinar.sciencemag.org
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Weekly News

New Science/AAAS Webinar
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Wednesday, September 16, 2015, at 9 a.m. Pacific, 12 noon Eastern, 5 p.m. UK, 6 p.m. Central Europe
Hear the experts discuss how a multi-omics approach to cancer research can advance our understanding of cancer biology and uncover new biomarkers.
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Science/AAAS Science

Weekly News
 

08/28/15 Volume 349, Issue 6251

A roundup of the week’s top stories in Science:


In Brief

In science news around the world, the IS group destroys an ancient temple in Palmyra, Syria, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approves a “female Viagra” drug, eight protestors are arrested in Hawaii attempting to block construction of the Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope, a new quantum processor breaks the “1000-qubit barrier,” and more. Also, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration declares the deaths of 30 large whales in the Gulf of Alaska since May an “unusual mortality event,” triggering a focused investigation into the cause of the deaths. And Science chats with Jorge Cham, creator of the comic Piled Higher and Deeper (PHD), about his new, upcoming movie.


In Depth

Brazil

Brazilian scientists are facing one of the nation’s worst funding climates in decades. Battling a slumping economy and debt, Brazil’s federal government has taken an ax to spending, and it isn’t sparing science. President Dilma Rousseff’s administration has cut by 25% the Ministry of Science’s projected 2015 budget, and sliced 9% from the budget of the Ministry of Education, which plays an important role in funding graduate students. Research agencies are withholding money for grants that have already been awarded, and have canceled or postponed new calls for proposals. And Rousseff is redirecting funds once earmarked largely for research to send Brazilian students abroad to study. The funding climate is “the worst in 20 years,” says Helena Nader, president of the Brazilian Society for the Advancement of Science. At the root of the problem are changes in how Brazil’s government spends the royalties generated by Brazil’s lucrative offshore oil fields, which have been a major source of funding for science and technology development. In recent years, Brazil’s government has redirected much of the oil revenue to other priorities, including health care and education.

Reproducibility

The largest effort yet to replicate psychology studies has yielded both good and bad news. On the down side, of the 100 prominent papers analyzed, only 39% could be replicated unambiguously, as a group of 270 researchers describes on page 943. On the up side, despite the sobering results, the effort seems to have drawn little of the animosity that greeted a similar replication effort last year. This time around, even some of the original authors see the replications as a useful addition to their own research. “This is how science works,” says Joshua Correll, a psychologist at the University of Colorado, Boulder, and one of the authors whose results could not be replicated. “How else will we converge on the truth? Really, the surprising thing is that this kind of systematic attempt at replication is not more common.” That’s encouraging news to Brian Nosek, a psychologist at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville who led the mass replication effort, which began in 2011 with the goal of putting psychological science on more rigorous experimental footing.

Neuroscience

It is famous for robbing Lou Gehrig of his life and Stephen Hawking of his mobility and voice, but just how amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) destroys motor neurons in the brain and spinal cord remains a mystery. Now, scientists are converging on an explanation, at least for a fraction of the ALS cases caused by a mutation also associated with a kind of dementia. In cells with the mutation, the new work shows, pores in the membrane separating the nucleus and cytoplasm become clogged, preventing vital molecules from passing through and creating a fatal cellular traffic jam. For now, the work applies only to the mutation dubbed C9orf72—a DNA stutter in which a short nucleotide sequence, GGGGCC, is repeated hundreds to thousands of times in a gene on chromosome 9. Nor do the multiple labs reporting results this week agree on exactly what plugs those nuclear pores and how the cells die. Still, many in the field are calling the work a major breakthrough, and say the findings could point to new therapies, as well as a novel mechanism for neurodegeneration.

Energy

Nuclear fusion has always required titanic machines and vast amounts of public money—and success is always decades away. Now, a privately funded company has taken what some physicists say is a significant step toward mastering fusion energy with a smaller, cheaper, faster approach. Tri Alpha Energy announced this week that it has built a machine that forms a ball of gas—superheated to about 10 million degrees Celsius—and holds it steady for 5 milliseconds without decaying. Those conditions are well short of what is needed for fusion, but the feat shows for the first time that Tri Alpha’s unorthodox approach can trap hot fusion gas in a steady state. Now, the scientists hope to scale up the technique toward times and temperatures that cause atomic nuclei in the gas to fuse together, releasing energy.

Botany

With more than 25,000 species, orchids are the largest group of plants. A new family tree shows how they owe their diversity to a series of innovations that individually or jointly touched off explosions of new species. The pace of diversification rose after orchids developed a way to lump their pollen into balls called pollinia, which allowed them to exclusively rely on certain insect species for pollination. Many lineages benefited from the evolution of a kind of water-saving photosynthesis. A shift to living in trees opened up many niches, as did a move into tropical mountains such as the Andes.


Feature

In North America, crayfish have diversified into roughly 400 species—two-thirds of the world’s total—and live mainly in the southeast. Biologists estimate nearly half of U.S. species are imperiled, whereas about a third of the world’s crayfish are. Spurred by growing concerns that pollution, habitat destruction, and other threats are placing many crayfish species in harm’s way, federal officials are taking a hard look at whether to give legal protection to two: the Guyandotte River crayfish found in southern West Virginia and the Big Sandy crayfish found in Kentucky, West Virginia, and Virginia. If the listings go through, a broad range of economically important activities that affect the crayfish, including mining, logging, and recreation, could feel an impact. So government officials are proceeding with care, seeking to learn as much as possible about the enigmatic invertebrates before making decisions—and they are asking researchers like West Liberty University’s Zachary Loughman for help.

Today’s most successful religions have one thing in common: moralizing gods that care about how people treat one another and will punish those who are selfish and cruel. But for most of human history, these “big gods” were the exception. If today’s hunter-gatherers are any guide, for thousands of years our ancestors conceived of deities as utterly indifferent to the human realm, and to whether we behaved well or badly. Now, to crack the mystery of why and how people around the world came to believe in moralizing gods, researchers are using a novel tool in religious studies: the scientific method. By combining laboratory experiments, cross-cultural fieldwork, and analysis of the historical record, an interdisciplinary team has proposed that belief in judgmental deities was key to the cooperation needed to build and sustain large, complex societies. And once big gods and big societies existed, their moralizing deities helped religions as dissimilar as Islam and Mormonism to spread by making groups of the faithful more cooperative and therefore more successful. Critics say the big gods team is projecting modern values onto ancient cultures, and that belief in moralizing deities is a byproduct of other social changes. To settle the debate, researchers are looking for quantitative data in novel places, including the historical record.

To test his hypothesis about how moralizing, prosocial religions evolved, University of British Columbia psychologist Ara Norenzayan needs help from the humanities. Did moralizing gods, community-wide rituals, and supernatural punishment emerge before or after societies became politically complex? Has any large-scale society succeeded without prosocial religion? And what does “moralizing” really mean at different times and in difficult cultures? To answer these questions in a rigorous, scientific way, he and his colleagues are trying to convince historians to turn the nuanced knowledge in their heads into the kind of data scientists need: a database’s binary code of yes/no answers. By creating the Database of Religious History, the big gods team is attempting to bridge the gulf between humanistic and scientific scholarship—but success hinges on enticing leading historians and religious studies scholars to join them.


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The evolution of religion, the decoy effect, & more

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News from Science

 

Latest News and Headlines

27 August 2015

 

 

 

Podcast: A debunked dragon, progress toward a universal flu vaccine, and more
 

 
 

 

 

Video: What frogs can teach us about being fooled by decoys
 

 
 

 

 

Feature: Why big societies need big gods
 

 
 

 

 

Feature: Turning history into a binary code
 

 
 

 

 

Piling it even higher and deeper: Grad school woes earn film sequel
 

 
 

 

 

Death of beloved polar bear, Knut, solved
 

 
 

 

 

African wildlife harbors resistance to first-line antibiotics
 

 
 

 

 

Crayfish create a new species of female ‘superclones’
 

 
 

 

 

Tugging, pushing deep within Earth may explain mysterious earthquakes
 

 
 

 

 

Plugged pores may cause dementia, other neurological diseases
 

 
 

 

 

Fighting wildlife smuggling, one DNA test at a time
 

 
 

 

 

What the microbes in your home say about you
 

 
 

 

 

Orchids’ dazzling diversity explained
 

 
 

 

 

 

 
 

 

   

 

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