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A new biological theory states that cultural behavior is not just a regional quirk, but a defense against the spread of disease
August 03, 2009
| By Rob Dunn
Does an obscure nerve cell help explain what gorillas, elephants, whales—and people—have in common?
June 2009
| By Ingfei Chen
Funny-looking cells and an air of expectation
June 2009
| By Carey Winfrey
A scientist by training, author Philip Alcabes studies the etymology of epidemiology and the cultural fears of worldwide disease
April 28, 2009
| By Abigail Tucker
Do we take more risks when we feel safe? Fifty years after we began using the three-point seatbelt, there's a new answer
April 2009
| By William Ecenbarger
A professor explains how new technology drastically altered the modern American family unit.
January 29, 2009
| By Abigail Tucker
Doctors once thought that only women suffered from hysteria, but a medical historian says that men were always just as susceptible
January 05, 2009
| By Abigail Tucker
The way you arrange your home or office may reveal surprising results
October 21, 2008
| By Megan Gambino
In Colorado, the gene linked to a virulent form of breast cancer found mainly in Jewish women is discovered in Hispanic Catholics
October 2008
| By Jeff Wheelwright
Author Tom Vanderbilt Shows Why Cars and People Don’t Mix
August 25, 2008
| By Abigail Tucker
Charles Darwin's bid for enduring fame was sparked 150 years ago by word of a rival's research
June 2008
| By Richard Conniff
What do our primate cousins know and when do they know it? Researcher Laurie Santos is trying to read their minds
January 2008
| By Jerry Adler
They made us who we are, some researchers now say
December 2007
| By Richard Conniff
Could ancient campfire rituals have separated us from Neanderthals?
February 01, 2007
| By Eric Jaffe
Humans' two-legged gait evolved to save energy, new research says
July 01, 2007
| By Eric Jaffe
The Tufts University developmental scientist challenges the myth of the troubled adolescent in his new book, "The Good Teen"
September 2007
| By Eric Jaffe
What will make you happy? A social scientist explains why it's so hard to predict
May 2007
| By Eric Jaffe
Recent studies illustrate which traits humans and apes have in common—and which they don't
October 11, 2007
| By Anne Casselman
Norman Mailer's anger and towering ego propelled-and undermined-his prodigious output
January 2008
| By Lance Morrow
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