Showing posts with label Scientific American-Today in Science.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scientific American-Today in Science.. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 7, 2024

Scientific American-Today in Science

"Mind-body unity, the media's 'protest paradigm", and the evolution of puppy-dog eyes."

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.  Accessed on 07 May 2024, 2100 UTC.

Content and Source:  https://www.scientificamerican.com.

Please scroll down to read your selections.  Thanks for joining us today.

Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.blogspot.com).

 

Today In Science

May 7, 2024: Today we’re covering mind-body unity, the media’s “protest paradigm” and the evolution of puppy-dog eyes.
Robin Lloyd, Contributing Editor
TOP STORIES

Anti-Matter Mission

A two-week NASA experiment set for launch as soon as May 15 to Earth’s stratosphere is meant to help solve a long-standing mystery about how much antimatter there is in the universe and where it comes from. The High-Energy Light Isotope eXperiment (HELIX) mission will suspend a cosmic-ray detecting probe from a giant balloon. Cosmic rays are subatomic particles—including antimatter, the opposite-charge version of ordinary matter—that pelt our planet from interstellar and intergalactic space.

Why this is so cool: For nearly two decades, scientists have known there’s more antimatter—in the form of particles called positrons—washing over Earth than current models can explain. Learning where these excess positrons come from holds great promise for unlocking even deeper cosmic secrets. Scientists suspect their sources “could be almost anything, ranging from emissions by conventional astrophysical objects to the esoteric behavior of dark matter, the invisible stuff that seems to govern the large-scale behavior of galaxies,” reports freelance science writer Rachel Berkowitz.

What the experts say: To figure out which explanation best fits the data, HELIX will focus on a deceptively simple measurement: gauging how much time each of two specific particles spent hurtling through the galaxy. “It’s like carbon-dating cosmic rays,” Berkowitz writes.
Top Story Image
An illustration of a high-altitude balloon afloat in Earth's upper atmosphere. NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image Lab/Michael Lentz

Evolution of Puppy-Dog Eyes 

A 2019 study came to a seemingly heartwarming conclusion: The eyebrow muscles that enable dogs’ endearing pleading expressions evolved in domestic canines to help them communicate with humans. The team had found the muscles in several domestic breeds but not in most wolves. Now a new analysis has found the same eyebrow muscles in an African wild dog, casting doubt on the earlier conclusion, reports Gillian Dohrn. The wild dogs likely evolved the muscles to make puppy-dog eyes to communicate with one another, not with humans, the researchers say. “I wonder if these muscles have been around for a really long time and wolves are the ones that lost them," says Anne Burrows, author of the earlier study.

How they did it: For the new study, the researchers dissected a recently deceased African wild dog from a zoo. They found that both the levator anguli oculi medalis and the retractor anguli oculi lateralis muscles, thought to create the puppy-dog eyes expression, were similar in size to those of domestic dog breeds. 

What the experts say: “It opens the door to thinking about where dogs come from, and what they are,” Burrows says.
Top Story Image
A pack of African wild dogs (Lycaon pictus) warily approaches a remote camera near banks of Moremi River in Botswana. Paul Souders/Getty Images
TODAY'S NEWS
• Collapsing sheets of spacetime could explain dark matter and why the universe “hums.” | 8 min read
• Studying mouse reactions to an optical illusion can teach us about how consciousness works in the brain. | 3 min read
• How should wildfire damage, such as smoke, soot and ash, be measured in homes that survive the flames? | 3 min read
• A “protest paradigm” shows what’s wrong with the media’s coverage of student activism. | 5 min read
More News
EXPERT PERSPECTIVES
• Our thoughts about time, aging and sickness can play a remarkably powerful role in the amount of time it takes us to recover from an injury, write Ellen Langer and Peter Aungle, a psychology professor and psychology Ph.D. candidate, respectively, at Harvard University. This conclusion, documented in Langer’s recent book The Mindful Body, is the product of the past 45 years of research in the Langer Lab on ways in which the mind shapes the body’s physiology. The work suggests that “people can think themselves sick when they could otherwise be healthy and that they can also think themselves well,” Langer and Aungle write. | 5 min read
More Opinion
Given the opportunity, most people take to experimenting with houseplants, seedlings and digging in dirt. It broadens our horizons and can give us a sense of wonder and awe. I’m no exception. In my suburban youth, I enjoyed countless weekend hours helping my parents tend to indoor plants, spruce up garden beds and attempt to grow vegetables (if you know, you know). Plenty of research confirms that exposure to nature’s greenery as well as time outdoors can lift our mood. This review of The Light Eaters: How the Unseen World of Plant Intelligence Offers a New Understanding of Life on Earth reveals another aspect of “plant drama,” as the book’s author Zoë Schlanger puts it. Her decision to cover botanical scientific discoveries helped her counter the dread that had accompanied years of reporting on climate change. 
Send thoughts, comments and your thoughts and photos from any gardening and plant-growing experiences to: newsletters@sciam.com.  
—Robin Lloyd, Contributing Editor
Scientific American
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Thursday, April 4, 2024

Scientific American-Today in Science.

"Today in Science:  Ancient mummies are riddled with worms...."

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.  Accessed on 05 April 2024, 0226 UTC.

Content and Source:  https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/?tab=rm&ogbl#inbox/FMfcgzGxSbnRvTVzWmQPgQnlGsvsBFML/Scientific American-Today in Science.

Please scroll down to read your selections.  Thanks for joining us today.

Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.blogspot.com).

Today In Science

April 4 2024: Heavy disease burden in ancient Egypt, the perils of fast science, and we're on eclipse day cloud-watch.
Andrea Gawrylewski, Chief Newsletter Editor
TOP STORIES

Mummy Diseases

Researchers examined data collected in 31 separate studies of mummies from Egypt and neighboring Nubia, dating back to 2000 B.C. In total, about 65 percent of the mummies had parasitic worms. Some 40 percent had head lice. Of the mummies that were tested for Plasmodium falciparum malaria (the most dangerous and deadly form of the illness), 22 percent had it. The scientists estimate that about 10 percent of mummies had leishmaniasis, a deadly parasitic disease that causes internal organs to enlarge.

Why this is interesting: Malaria and leishmaniasis were common in ancient Egypt likely because of the proximity of the Nile river, which harbored insect vectors for the diseases. However, notorious afflictions of ancient civilizations like whipworm and roundworm, which are spread through feces, were absent from the mummies. Researchers suspect the regular flooding of the Nile distributed fertile silt over the land and reduced the need for animal and human dung to fertilize crops.

What the experts say: The disease burden was shared by rich and poor people alike. “When you have such a high percentage of people in a civilization infected with chronic diseases like this, it has a huge impact on society functioning as a whole,” says Marissa Ledger, a medical microbiology resident and biological anthropologist at McMaster University in Ontario.
Mummy being inserted into a CT scanner
A mummy goes into a CT scanner, which helps investigate the tissues and bones without unwrapping the fragile linen. MediaNews Group/Los Angeles Daily News via Getty Images

Science in the Fast Lane

The number of retractions of scientific research papers has grown dramatically in the last two decades to about eight in 10,000 papers, according to a 2022 estimate by the blog Retraction Watch. Scientific journals issue retractions when a paper becomes untrustworthy due to substantial errors or because of author misconduct or ethical violation. Increased retractions weaken public trust in science and scientific institutions. 

Why is this happening? One reason for more errors and misconduct could be that science is being conducted too quickly or is under too much pressure to produce results, Naomi Oreskes, historian of science at Harvard University, writes in the April issue of Scientific American. The sheer volume of papers has skyrocketed under such pressure: One recent study put the paper count at more than seven million a year, compared with fewer than a million as recently as 1980.

What the experts say: Good science takes time, Oreskes says. The number of papers published suggests "that the research world has prioritized quantity over quality,” she writes. “Researchers may need to slow down—not speed up—if we are to produce knowledge worthy of trust.”
LISTEN NOW
Science, Quickly
Protecting Digital Art
Generative artificial intelligence tools can now instantly produce images from text prompts. Impressive tech, yes. But it's worrying to professional artists. Two new computer programs called Glaze and Nightshade, developed by a team of University of Chicago computer scientists and artists, add algorithmic cloaks over the tops of digital images that prevent AI models from "absorbing" and learning them. Learn more in our podcast Science, Quickly.
TODAY'S NEWS
• Here are up-to-date weather conditions expected along the path of April 8’s total solar eclipse. Our in-house weather guru Andrea Thompson will be updating this article regularly until the big day. | 5 min read
• IVF procedures may be under threat in the U.S., and that has scientists and doctors worried. | 5 min read
• Scientific American's own copy editor, Emily Makowski explores the fascinating way her brain produces "subtitles" for every word she hears (or thinks). | 9 min read
More News
EXPERT PERSPECTIVES
• Rewarding detections of fraud in scientific research and publishing, rather than punishing whistleblowers, could help the research community avoid an estimated 5,000 paper retractions a year--a mere fraction of retractions that should happen but don't, write Ivan Oransky and Adam Marcus, the founders of Retraction Watch, a blog that reports on the retraction of scientific papers. | 5 min read
More Opinion
One of my first assignments as a novice journalist was to write an explainer of the complicated terminology used by scientific journals around problematic papers. "Expressions of concern," "corrections" and "errata" can all be issued for a paper before it is retracted (if it ever is). Opaque procedural details create an air of complexity and inaccessibility around scientific publishing, which is precisely the opposite of what the public needs to feel trust in science. Sadly, my article (written for The Scientist magazine) came before widespread digitization of that publication, otherwise I'd humblebrag-link to it here. The blog Retraction Watch keeps an extensive appendix of terminology surrounding retractions, which you can peruse and get the gist of.
Reach out anytime with feedback on this newsletter: newsletters@sciam.com. I'll be back tomorrow with an eclipse prep email!
—Andrea Gawrylewski, Chief Newsletter Editor
Scientific American
Subscribe to this and all of our newsletters here.

Scientific American
One New York Plaza, New York, NY, 10004
Support our mission, subscribe to Scientific American here

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