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20 votes
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China’s CRISPR babies: Read exclusive excerpts from the unseen original research
16 votes -
How fungi made all life on land possible
9 votes -
Effects of one year of Vitamin D and marine Omega-3 fatty acid supplementation on biomarkers of systemic inflammation in older US adults
11 votes -
Vikings killed off Iceland's walruses – ancient DNA says the extinct Icelandic walruses were a genetically distinct population
6 votes -
Migrating Russian eagles run up huge data roaming charges
14 votes -
A newly-discovered species of beetle, Nelloptodes gretae, has been named after young climate activist Greta Thunberg
5 votes -
In pursuit of better baby formula: Replicating human milk is no easy feat—nor is separating the science from the hype
7 votes -
The Svalbard Global Seed Vault has been named one of the most important projects in the world over the last fifty years
9 votes -
The sea is running out of fish, despite nations’ pledges to stop it
10 votes -
The strange, uncertain fate of one of the world’s most valuable salmon habitats
5 votes -
Lab-made primordial soup yields RNA bases
7 votes -
A new study posits that tsunamis triggered by the Great Alaska Earthquake in 1964 washed a deadly fungus onto the shore
6 votes -
Survival of the friendliest: It’s time to give the violent metaphors of evolution a break
8 votes -
In California, orcas and salmon have become so scarce people have forgotten what once was. Will the Northwest be next?
11 votes -
Earliest signs of life
10 votes -
Venoms vs. poisons
3 votes -
How cities reshape the evolutionary path of urban wildlife
9 votes -
GM mosquito progeny not dying in Brazil: study
10 votes -
The tiny algae at ground zero of Greenland's melting glaciers
6 votes -
Genetically modified mosquitoes breed in Brazil
8 votes -
Evidence for bias of genetic ancestry in resting state functional MRI
Conference paper: Evidence For Bias Of Genetic Ancestry In Resting State Functional MRI [blocked] Preprint (not peer-reviewed): Evidence for Bias of Genetic Ancestry in Resting State Functional...
Conference paper: Evidence For Bias Of Genetic Ancestry In Resting State Functional MRI
[blocked]Preprint (not peer-reviewed): Evidence for Bias of Genetic Ancestry in Resting State Functional MRI
[not blocked]Someone posted this on Reddit. It purports to be a study which shows that it is possible to identify a person's genetic ancestry (in other words, their "race") by observing their brain activity.
Thereby, we demonstrated that genetic ancestry is encoded in the functional connectivity pattern of the brain at rest. We hypothesize that these observed differences are a result of known ethnicity-related variations in head and brain morphology
This feels problematic, in that it gives support to the racist idea that different "races" think differently. But I don't know enough myself to believe this study or debunk it. I present it for more knowledgeable people than myself to dissect and discuss.
6 votes -
'Ding dong, it's time': Dancing tarantulas emerge in droves to mate in western US
11 votes -
Mystery disease kills dozens of dogs across Norway as officials scramble to find cause
7 votes -
Winners of the 2020 Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences, Fundamental Physics and Mathematics announced, awarding a collective $21.6 million
5 votes -
Deinonychus, the raptor that made us rethink dinosaurs
3 votes -
The 'Sea Nomad' children who see like dolphins
6 votes -
Spectacular mitosis in mesenchymal stem cells
6 votes -
Maybe your Zoloft stopped working because a liver fluke tried to turn your Nth-great-grandmother into a zombie
6 votes -
How life sciences actually work
5 votes -
A vaccine for cat allergies is in development; early results are promising, aiming for market release in 2022
7 votes -
Horticulturists have planted five palm trees in Laugardalur to investigate how these plants respond to Icelandic weather conditions
9 votes -
In brain’s electrical ripples, markers for memories appear
5 votes -
How do protozoa get around?
6 votes -
Alarm over North Atlantic right whale's survival after recent deaths
5 votes -
Twenty pilot whales have died stranded in mysterious circumstances on the south-western coast of Iceland
4 votes -
The life and death of an Instagram fish - What one funny-looking fish taught us about evolution, the internet, and the monsters we create
7 votes -
The story of CTVT—a contagious cancer that spreads from dog to dog—gets weirder all the time
12 votes -
Anglerfish are increasingly being captured on video, revealing an array of surprising behaviors
8 votes -
Testing if sharks can smell a drop of blood
7 votes -
Tiny bombs in your blood - The complement system
5 votes -
Accuracy of genotyping chips called into question
3 votes -
Whistling while they work: Cooperative laguna dolphins have a unique accent
6 votes -
Taking the sting out: Australian gene editing is crossing the pain threshold
4 votes -
Dozens of dead beached whales have been spotted by sightseers during a helicopter flight over western Iceland
9 votes -
Scientists debate the origin of cell types in the first animals
6 votes -
Stentors: Single-celled giants
8 votes -
I couldn’t tell this delicious lab-grown ice cream didn’t come from a cow
7 votes -
The snakes that ate Florida
4 votes -
The snakes that ate Florida: Biologists wade deep into the Everglades to wrestle with the invasion of giant pythons threatening the state’s wetlands
4 votes