Humans

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We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.

  1. Psychology

    Goalkeepers deceive themselves when facing penalty kicks

    Soccer’s goalies fall victim to a logical fallacy during the sport’s most high-pressure situation, seeing trends where none exists.

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  2. Health & Medicine

    Hepatitis E widespread among English blood donors

    Screening of 225,000 blood donations reveals a high prevalence of the hepatitis E virus.

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  3. Tech

    Small lies in social networks may keep society running

    Lying in social networks could have adverse, as well as beneficial, effects depending on the severity of the deception.

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  4. Health & Medicine

    Boot camp bug

    Adenoviruses, which cause respiratory illnesses including some colds, plague boot camps.

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  5. Genetics

    Gene activity change can produce cancer

    Scientists have long thought that epigenetic changes, which alter gene activity, can cause cancer. Now they have demonstrated it in a mouse experiment.

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  6. Health & Medicine

    Long-term Parkinson’s treatment sheds bad rep

    Prolonged used of levodopa doesn’t increase the severity of side effects from the Parkinson’s drug, new research shows.

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  7. Health & Medicine

    Tests hint at trouble with pairing cystic fibrosis drugs

    Combining two types of cystic fibrosis drugs may cancel out the benefits of one of the medications.

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  8. Psychology

    Schadenfreude starts young

    Children as young as 2 years old feel joy at another’s misfortune, new research suggests, showing jealousy’s deep roots.

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  9. Health & Medicine

    Babies’ brains practice words long before they can speak

    When listening to speech, babies’ brains are active in motor areas required for moving the mouth and tongue in ways that produce words.

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  10. Genetics

    Airborne MERS virus found in Saudi Arabian camel barn

    The air in a Saudi Arabian camel barn holds genetic fragments of MERS, a new study shows.

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  11. Neuroscience

    For rats, a break from stress isn’t worth the relief

    An unplanned vacation from stress might seem like a good idea, but a new study in rats shows that unpredictable escapes from pressure produce more strain on the first day back.

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  12. Genetics

    Hints about schizophrenia emerge from genetic study

    From thousands of genomes, researchers pinpoint dozens of DNA changes that may underlie schizophrenia

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