All Stories

  1. Tech

    Imperfect chip pretty darn good

    Faster, smaller and more efficient, processors with that cut corners can still be good for some applications.

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  2. Tech

    DNA used as rewritable data storage in cells

    Genetically encoded memory could track cell division inside the body.

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  3. Humans

    Our increasingly not-so-little kids

    Little kids are meant to get big. Just not too quickly. When overfeeding spurs the girth of young children, youngsters find themselves propelled down the road towards diabetes and heart disease, a new study finds. In just the past decade, for instance, the share of kids with diabetes or pre-diabetes skyrocketed from 9 percent to a whopping 23 percent.

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  4. Earth

    Pumping groundwater raises sea level

    Two new studies flag an underreported factor in global ocean change.

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  5. Science & Society

    Despite more time for celebrity news, duration of fame remains the same

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  6. Life

    Climate change miscues may shrink species’ outer limits

    Ecological partnerships are getting out of sync especially at high latitudes, a study of hummingbirds suggests.

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  7. Health & Medicine

    Severe sleep apnea tied to cancer risk

    A chronic lack of oxygen caused by disrupted rest may explain the association, researchers say.

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  8. Life

    Egg wars

    Birds engage in evolutionary arms race.

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  9. Pacific coasts in line for solar eclipse

    Moon will block sun, almost, for four minutes Sunday during annular eclipse

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  10. Humans

    From cancer to quantum, teens’ scientific feats celebrated

    Winners of the 2012 Intel ISEF show the promise of science for improving the world.

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  11. Life

    Good cholesterol may not be what keeps the heart healthy

    Genetic study suggests that higher levels of HDL aren’t directly responsible for the lower risk of cardiovascular disease seen in population studies.

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  12. The neutrino messengers

    In 1844 Samuel Morse sent a telegram from Washington, D.C., to Baltimore using pulses of electrons to encode “What hath God wrought.” Now that message has gotten a reply, courtesy of physicist Kevin McFarland and a team of his colleagues. Kevin McFarland, a physicist who sent a message using neutrinos, left his mark on the […]

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