Why Paleontologists Should Love Meat-Eaters
… Particularly the ones that feasted on human flesh. Thanks, guys!
How Fluid Dynamics Can Help You Navigate Crowds
If you plan to be in a seething mass of humans at some point—whether it’s an inauguration or protest thereof—here’s how to keep yourself safe
How Mobile Technology Can Help Universities Combat Depression
Using sensors on smartphones and smartwatches can shed light on patients’ symptoms, even identifying ones they didn’t notice or share with counselors
Footprints Found at Ancient Hot Springs Could Represent Earliest Settlement of Tibetan Plateau
New age measurements of the footprints help pinpoint when humans first settled the highest region on Earth
What Tickling Giggly Rats Can Tell Us About the Brain
Their laughter manifests in a surprising region of the cerebral cortex
Metaphorically Speaking, Your Nervous System is a Dictatorship
Except when it’s an oligarchy. Or a democracy. Or all three.
Underwater Finds Reveal Humans’ Long Presence in North America
Stone tools and mastodon remains help show that the Americas were peopled more than 14,000 years ago
How Tuberculosis Shaped Victorian Fashion
The deadly disease—and later efforts to control it—influenced trends for decades
10 Things Science Says About Being a Mom in 2016
For one, a nurturing mother can help her child’s brain grow
Infants Learn to Pay Attention (or Not) From Watching Mom and Dad
Parents who focus on play may help babies develop critical skills that predict future success
You Can’t Sleep While Traveling Because Your Brain Acts Like a Dolphin’s
On the first night in a new place, half your brain stays awake to watch out for danger
Who’s Laughing Now? Listeners Can Tell if Laughers are Friends or Not
We laugh differently with friends, and the reasons may lie deep in our social evolution
Human Sacrifices May Lie Behind the Rise of Ancient Social Status
Dark practices may have helped the elite keep the lower classes in line, a new study hints
The Right Body Language Can Boost Odds of Online Dating Success
Potential partners size you up in seconds, and the way you sit or stand matters
Twitter May Be Faster Than FEMA Models for Tracking Disaster Damage
Real-time online activity could provide speedier assessments as disaster unfolds than tools currently used by the government agency
A Taste for Raw Meat May Have Helped Shape Human Evolution
Stone tools might have let our ancestors more easily chew and digest meat, which in turn may have changed our teeth and jaws
Sleepy Suspects Are Way More Likely to Falsely Confess to a Crime
In a study, almost 70 percent of sleep-deprived people admitted to something they didn’t do
An Ancient, Brutal Massacre May Be the Earliest Evidence of War
Even nomadic hunter-gatherers engaged in deliberate mass killings 10,000 years ago
How Are Horoscopes Still a Thing?
No, there’s no science behind an astrologer’s prediction for 2016, but that doesn’t mean it can’t be accurate
Smile, Frown, Grimace and Grin — Your Facial Expression Is the Next Frontier in Big Data
Engineer Rana el Kaliouby is set to change the way we interact with our devices—and each other
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