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4 votes
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Bringing a fossil to life: Reverse engineering locomotion
3 votes -
The 2019 Nobel Prize in Physics has been awarded, with one half to James Peebles and the other half jointly to Michel Mayor and Didier Queloz
7 votes -
In their own words: Behind Americans’ views of ‘socialism’ and ‘capitalism’
6 votes -
False witness: Why is the US still using hypnosis to convict criminals?
10 votes -
Engineering with origami
6 votes -
Walkability a key factor determining upward mobility of a city’s residents
10 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 -
Earliest signs of life
10 votes -
Venoms vs. poisons
3 votes -
Where theory meets chalk, dust flies - A photo survey of the blackboards of mathematicians
6 votes -
Quantum Darwinism, an idea to explain objective reality, passes first tests
11 votes -
How cities reshape the evolutionary path of urban wildlife
9 votes -
Scott Aaronson's Quantum Supremacy FAQ
10 votes -
Communicating science online increases interest, engagement and access to funds
7 votes -
The intuitive Monty Hall problem
9 votes -
Using "time outs" to discipline children is not going to harm them or your relationship with them, US research suggests
6 votes -
AI competitions don’t produce useful models
5 votes -
GM mosquito progeny not dying in Brazil: study
10 votes -
Why Americans don’t fully trust many who hold positions of power and responsibility
9 votes -
How to save a glacier – Iceland's scientists offer hope with carbon capture technology
4 votes -
Babies born by Caesarean section have different gut bacteria, microbiome study finds
18 votes -
The problem with sugar-daddy science
11 votes -
Scientists taught rats to play hide-and-seek with them
9 votes -
Mental Models: The Best Way to Make Intelligent Decisions (109 Models Explained)
10 votes -
Index shows least-, most-accepting countries for migrants
3 votes -
Conspiracy theorists have chilled real fluoride research, researchers say
12 votes -
Genetically modified mosquitoes breed in Brazil
8 votes -
Democracy devouring itself: The paper predicting the end of democracy
20 votes -
A famous argument against free will has been debunked
19 votes -
How the brain filters sound
6 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 -
Scientists discover new evidence of the asteroid that killed off the dinosaurs
11 votes -
'Ding dong, it's time': Dancing tarantulas emerge in droves to mate in western US
11 votes -
The perfect TED talk that never happened
5 votes -
42 can be written as the sum of three cubes, which was the last remaining unsolved case under 100
17 votes -
Winners of the 2020 Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences, Fundamental Physics and Mathematics announced, awarding a collective $21.6 million
5 votes -
Are Deep Neural Networks Dramatically Overfitted?
7 votes -
The why of the world
2 votes -
Sally Floyd, who helped things run smoothly online, dies at 69
7 votes -
Making new elements doesn’t pay. Just ask this Berkeley scientist
5 votes -
Girls’ comparative advantage in reading can largely explain the gender gap in math-related fields
16 votes -
To Fix the Climate, Tell Better Stories: The missing climate change narrative
6 votes -
Digitizing objects from Smithsonian's enormous collection
3 votes -
The size and shape of raindrops
3 votes -
The elements
8 votes -
This meteorite came from the core of another planet. Inside it, a new mineral: Edscottite.
News article: This meteorite came from the core of another planet. Inside it, a new mineral: Edscottite. Submission from the geologists to The Meteoritical Society: "Edscottite, Fe5C2, A new iron...
News article: This meteorite came from the core of another planet. Inside it, a new mineral: Edscottite.
Submission from the geologists to The Meteoritical Society: "Edscottite, Fe5C2, A new iron carbide mineral from the Wedderburn iron meteorite." PDF link
11 votes -
Deinonychus, the raptor that made us rethink dinosaurs
3 votes