Humans

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We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.

  1. Cosmology

    Feedback

    Readers weigh in on the Hubble constant, temperature extremes and heart screenings for student-athletes.

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  2. Archaeology

    Written in bone

    Researchers are reconstructing the migrations that carried agriculture into Europe by analyzing DNA from the skeletons of early farmers and the people they displaced.

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  3. Psychology

    Basketball players richly rewarded for selfishness in playoffs

    Future paychecks trip up teamwork in NBA championship tournament.

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  4. Health & Medicine

    Musicians have elevated risk of hearing loss

    Compared to the general public, professional musicians' risk of hearing loss and ringing in the ears is higher, a new study shows.

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  5. Science & Society

    Anti-leukemia vaccine reported hope of future

    Fifty years ago, Science News Letter reported on the promise of a vaccine to prevent leukemia. No preventive vaccine has come to pass, but leukemia vaccines as treatments has yielded promising results.

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  6. Neuroscience

    Humans can sniff out gender

    A new study adds to controversy of whether people have pheromones.

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  7. Psychology

    Leonardo da Vinci may have invented 3-D image with ‘Mona Lisa’

    A mysterious copy of the ‘Mona Lisa’ combines with the Louvre painting to make a stereoscopic image of the woman with the enigmatic smile.

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  8. Humans

    Neandertals’ inferiority to early humans questioned

    Early modern humans may not have been smarter or more technologically or socially savvy than their Neandertal neighbors.

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  9. Health & Medicine

    Drug resistance has gone global, WHO says

    World Health Organization reports that antibiotics are failing worldwide against infections.

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  10. Health & Medicine

    Potential H7N9 bird flu vaccine shows promise

    An early trial of a bird flu vaccine suggests that the treatment could be used to counter the potentially deadly H7N9 flu virus.

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  11. Health & Medicine

    With help from pig tissue, people regrow muscle

    Noncellular material implanted in patients attracts stem cells to fix injuries.

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  12. Science & Society

    Students retain information better with pens than laptops

    Compared with typing on a laptop, writing notes by hand may lead to deeper understanding of lecture material.

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