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Science Friday
:: Humans
Top Stories | November 8
  • Colorful birds possibly raised for ceremonial and trade purposes long before Spanish arrival
  • Discussing how physicians and patients can cure their misunderstandings of medical statistics.
  • Amputees who feel phantom limbs can learn to do physically impossible body tricks
  • Scientists argue a newly discovered stretch of DNA essential for larynx development may have allowed the evolution of language.
  • :: More in Humans
    Scientists argue a newly discovered stretch of DNA essential for larynx development may have allowed the evolution of language.
    Bacon, cheesecake and Ho Hos elicit addictive behavior in rats similar to the behavior of rats addicted to heroin.
    Droughts were actually good times for early humans, helping to develop skills for survival in other parts of the world, Lisa Grossman reports in a blog from the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing's New Horizons in Science meeting.
    Headache patients may benefit from drug treatment even if they also suffer from depression or anxiety.
    Island-dwelling pygmies provide contested evidence that body size shrinks as mortality rates climb.
    :: Science News
    11|7 Issue Links
    Subtle gender-linked effects seen in youngsters mirror impacts witnessed earlier in rodents.
    Macaque mothers and infants engage in emotional interactions similar to those of human moms and their babies, a new study suggests.
    Psychologists and philosophers convene to discuss the roots of shared knowledge at a meeting in Waltham, Mass.