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  1. Humans

    Science’s next generation wins accolades

    Star students receive more than $530,000 in scholarships and prizes in the Intel Science Talent Search.

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  2. Animals

    Public tantrums defeat monkey moms too

    Rhesus macaque moms are more likely to give in to screaming babies when bystanders are watching and reacting

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  3. Health & Medicine

    Migraines during pregnancy may be linked to stroke

    Pregnant women who have migraines also face a heightened risk of stroke and other vascular diseases, a new study finds.

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  4. Health & Medicine

    Blood type could matter in pancreatic cancer

    People with type O blood are less likely to develop pancreatic cancer than are people with type B blood, a study finds.

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  5. Tech

    Coming: Needed Protections for Science Integrity

    The Obama admistration wants to depoliticize federal science.

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  6. Life

    Aphids support symbionts with borrowed DNA

    Aphids borrowed at least two genes from bacterial buddies, and those genes now support another bacterium that lives in the insects.

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  7. Physics

    Single top quark detected

    Scientists observe elusive single top quark, usually found in pairs.

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  8. Health & Medicine

    Early intellectual gap found for kids of older fathers

    A reanalysis of data from more than 33,000 U.S. children finds that those with older fathers fared somewhat poorer on intelligence tests than those with younger fathers, regardless of mothers’ ages.

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  9. Health & Medicine

    President reverses federal ban on stem cell funding

    President Barack Obama signed an executive order lifting a ban on federal funding for research that uses embryonic stem cells.

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  10. Space

    Frozen cosmic fingerprints

    Researchers claim to find evidence of 11th century supernovas and the solar cycle in an ice core.

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  11. Health & Medicine

    Dangers of biomedical plagiarism

    The bogus data present in plagiarized biomedical papers is not just an ethical lapse, but also a threat to effective medicine.

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  12. Math

    The four color problem gets a sharp new hue

    Mathematicians find new answers to the still puzzling theorem that four colors suffice to color any map.

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