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5,114 results

5,114 results for: seek

  1. In communicating science, Europe envies the U.S.

    From the August 16, 2008 issue of Science News.

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  2. Humans

    Nation needs recovery plan for science faculty jobs

    Over the past few months, many graduate students and postdocs have been receiving letters from department chairs apologetically explaining that the faculty job search at Institution X has been canceled. State and private universities are facing declining tax revenues and falling endowments, and are unwilling to raise tuition on newly impoverished families. From Harvard to […]

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  3. 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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  4. Treaty on antiquities hinders access for museums

    Treaty on antiquities hinders access for museums JAMES CUNO Like water on a leaky roof, looted artifacts are finding the path of least resistance to a buyer somewhere. Art Inst. of Chicago James Cuno, a past president of the Association of Art Museum Directors, has spent years investigating implications of a United Nations treaty: the […]

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  5. Science needs ace communicators and politicians

    In February, Alice Huang became president-elect of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. The renowned virologist began her career at Harvard in 1971, eventually becoming director of the laboratories of infectious diseases at Children’s Hospital Boston. After a stint at New York University, she moved to the California Institute of Technology in 1997 […]

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  6. Basic research generates jobs and competitiveness

    Trained as a mechanical engineer in India, Subra Suresh researched the interfaces between engineering, biology and materials science before becoming dean of engineering at MIT and, as of October, director of the U.S. National Science Foundation. In February in Washington, D.C., at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, Suresh […]

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  7. Computing

    When trolls come out from under their bridges, it’s bad news for scientific discourse

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  8. Math

    A field where breakthroughs are hard to come by produces two big advances on a single day

    Problems in number theory often have a certain exasperating charm: They are extraordinarily simple to state, but so difficult to prove that centuries of effort haven’t sufficed to crack them. So it’s pretty remarkable that on one day this May, mathematicians announced results on two of these mathematical conundrums. Both proofs address one of the […]

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  9. Neuroscience

    Study gives a jolt to brain researchers seeking to understand face blindness

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  10. Math

    Systems biology tunes in to cancer networks

    If cable TV systems had a channel called The Cancer Network, doctors would be wise to tune in. But there’s no such channel. So for now, they’ll just have to read articles in scientific journals that publish papers on the science of networks. Scientists in the new field of systems biology have made a lot […]

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  11. Physics

    Scientists seek mathematical insights for taming and explaining ‘dragon kings’

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  12. Math

    Flatland and its sequel bring the math of higher dimensions to the silver screen

    In 1884, Edwin Abbott wrote a strange and enchanting novella called Flatland, in which a square who lives in a two-dimensional world comes to comprehend the existence of a third dimension but is unable to persuade his compatriots of his discovery. Through the book, Abbott skewered hierarchical Victorian values while simultaneously giving a glimpse of […]

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