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Physiology

Age, gender and how plants and animals function
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The Tribal Tattoos of Science

This month's Smithsonian magazine has a fun little arts and culture story about a photographer who has traveled the world in pursuit of tattoos. The images are gorgeous black and whites—the photog, Chris Rainier, is a protégé of Ansel Adams, and it shows—and he seeks out the meaning behind the tatt...
October 20, 2010 | By Laura Helmuth

The Anatomy of Renaissance Art

The Renaissance may be best known for its artworks: Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel and “David,” and Da Vinci’s "Mona Lisa" and "Vitruvian Man" have without a doubt shaped the course of art history. But a new exhibit at the National Gallery of Art, “The Body Inside and Out: Anatomical Literature and ...
October 18, 2010 | By Jess Righthand

Cootie Catchers Say Lice Reveal Lots About Early Humans

Children all over America are returning to school this fall and I’m sure parents have done all they can to prep their youngsters—which hopefully involves any and all vaccines and boosters. But not even the most diligent efforts toward preventative health care can save your child from the bug that h...
September 13, 2010 | By admin

World War I British troops Battle of Arras

The Shock of War

World War I troops were the first to be diagnosed with shell shock, an injury – by any name – still wreaking havoc
September 2010 | By Caroline Alexander

Flu Shots for (Nearly) All

Should you get vaccinated for the flu this year? Yes, says the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and they have fewer qualifiers than usual for that recommendation.Until now, the CDC has recommended the vaccine only for people in specific "high-risk" groups (such as children, the elderly a...
August 24, 2010 | By Sarah Zielinski

Cholera, John Snow and the Grand Experiment

I started reading about cholera over the weekend after hearing that health officials had confirmed several cases of the disease among victims of the recent Pakistani floods. Cholera is a bacterial disease that produces diarrhea and vomiting; people with the disease can die within hours if they don'...
August 18, 2010 | By Sarah Zielinski

The Truth Behind Beer Goggles

The Urban Dictionary defines beer goggles as the "phenomenon in which one's consumption of alcohol makes physically unattractive persons appear beautiful." This doesn't happen for everyone, as the Mythbusters found when they tested themselves on the question of whether being tipsy or drunk led them...
August 17, 2010 | By Sarah Zielinski

Whooping Cough on the Rise in Several States

Seven infants in California have died so far this year from pertussis, a.k.a. whooping cough. The state's outbreak is the largest in decades; it has had a six-fold rise in the disease compared with last year. Arizona, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, upstate New York, Ohio, Oregon, Texas, South Caro...
August 04, 2010 | By Sarah Zielinski

Three Classes Wannabe Doctors Should Take Before Med School

Last week, the New York Times published an article about a little known practice of at least one medical school: accepting students who have not taken courses in science—biology, chemistry, organic chemistry and physics—or the MCAT entrance exam.The students apply in their sophomore or junior years...
August 02, 2010 | By Sarah Zielinski

Japan aged population

The Age of Peace

Maturing populations may mean a less violent future for many societies torn by internal conflict
August 2010 | By Carolyn O’Hara

Regeneration ear

Organs Made to Order

It won't be long before surgeons routinely install replacement body parts created in the laboratory
August 2010 | By Gretchen Vogel

Melvin Konner

Melvin Konner on the Evolution of Childhood

The anthropologist and physician talks about how our understanding of child development will change
August 2010 | By Terence Monmaney

contact lense with computer screen

Embedded Technologies: Power From the People

Energy harvested from our bodies will make possible mind-boggling gadgetry
August 2010 | By Michael Belfiore

New Technology Could Let Disabled Communicate by Sniffing

If you're paying attention, there can be an awful lot of information encoded in a series of nose sniffs. In and out, long and short, strong and shallow. One sniff, two sniffs, three sniffs. Now engineers at the Weizmann Institute in Israel have capitalized on that variety of sniffs and created a de...
July 27, 2010 | By Sarah Zielinski

An Unbelievable Accent

If I told you that "ants don't sleep," would you believe me? What if I were speaking with a foreign accent?Researchers at the University of Chicago have found that we judge non-native speakers to be less believable, though not because of any bias against foreigners. Instead, they say, it's simply b...
July 21, 2010 | By Sarah Zielinski

A Medical Lab on a Postage Stamp

In the magazine's 40th anniversary issue, one of the 40 things you need to know about the future is both revolutionary and unreal: "A medical laboratory will fit on a postage stamp."The idea behind Google—boiling down vast stores of knowledge into an elegant little package—is also the idea behind t...
July 19, 2010 | By Sarah Zielinski

Please Cover Your Mouth When You Sneeze

We've still got a few months until flu season starts here in the United States, so that should give us plenty of time to review proper cold and flu procedures. Why? Well, it appears that a number of you are just not getting it right. Yesterday I read a complaint from someone whose co-worker preferr...
July 13, 2010 | By Sarah Zielinski

In Search of a Tuberculosis Vaccine

When I told a co-worker yesterday that I was going on a tour of a tuberculosis vaccine research facility, she asked, "is TB still a problem?" Here in the United States, the disease is rare—only 12,904 cases were reported in 2008—and generally treatable with antibiotics. Outside of North America, Au...
July 01, 2010 | By Sarah Zielinski

You Don't Know the Back of Your Hand

Here's an experiment you can try (right now if you're sitting at a desk or table): take your left hand (or right hand if you're left-handed) and place it palm towards the floor beneath the table surface. Now place a piece of paper on top where your hand is. Draw 10 dots representing where you think...
June 21, 2010 | By Sarah Zielinski

A Spoonful of Pickle Juice...Helps Muscle Cramps Go Down

Midway across the pool, my calf muscle seized up. I grabbed hold of the lane line, pulled my toes back towards my shin and waited for the charley horse to release.Unfortunately for me, the experience has become a familiar one. It seems that whenever I’m in the thick of training for a road race (and...
June 16, 2010 | By Megan Gambino


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