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40 votes
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US National Institutes of Health suspends dozens of pathogen studies over ‘gain-of-function’ concerns
32 votes -
Disappearing polymorph
42 votes -
'Positive review only': Researchers hide AI prompts in papers to influence automated review
29 votes -
The strange (pre-tectonics) hypothesis of Earth expanding like a balloon
6 votes -
When people think that protests are more likely to be met with state violence, they are more likely to view confrontational tactics as legitimate and effective
17 votes -
US National Institutes of Health guts its first and largest study centered on women
19 votes -
Norway has launched a new scheme to lure top international researchers amid growing pressure on academic freedom in the US
11 votes -
RNA motifs coming into focus
8 votes -
US FBI raids home of prominent computer scientist who has gone incommunicado
36 votes -
Sociogenomics, a new scientific field is changing the understanding of how and why people develop the specific ways that they do
13 votes -
Holotypic Occlupanids - How the internet invented bread clip science
14 votes -
Why Thomas Jefferson meticulously monitored the weather wherever he went
8 votes -
Under Donald Trump, US government scientists told they need clearance to meet with Canadian counterparts
23 votes -
National Science Foundation freezes grant review in response to US President Donald Trump executive orders
13 votes -
World’s oldest 3D map discovered
11 votes -
Kids at-home science experiments (of the less tame variety)
My 5-year-old loves doing “science experiments” at home with me and her older siblings, but it seems that the online lists of experiments we’re choosing from are truncated to leave off all but the...
My 5-year-old loves doing “science experiments” at home with me and her older siblings, but it seems that the online lists of experiments we’re choosing from are truncated to leave off all but the least dangerous activities. This makes sense for a lot of low-parental-involvement contexts, but I’m going to be directing and deeply involved in these experiments. And I want fire. Smoke. Sparks. I want to make these experiments feel adventurous so the kids get really excited about whatever we’re learning. Baking soda and vinegar volcanoes and elephant toothpaste just don’t cut it.
What experiments can you recommend using only relatively common household materials? Chemicals, candles, electricity, a stovetop, etc. (Assume that the experimenters will all be taking standard precautions, wearing PPE, and generally using the experiments as both an opportunity to learn about science and about the safety measures that go with science experimentation.)
Or if you know of any websites listing these more spectacular home science experiments, please share those as well.
Bonus if the experiments involve multiple possible outcomes that the kid can use pen and paper and elementary math to predict in advance.
28 votes -
Sharing without clicking on news in social media
18 votes -
Scores of papers by Eliezer Masliah, prominent US neuroscientist and top National Institutes of Health official, fall under suspicion
25 votes -
Scientific rigor proponents retract paper on benefits of scientific rigor
13 votes -
Study finds people are consistently and confidently wrong about those with opposing views
37 votes -
Star botanist likely made up data about nutritional supplements, new probe finds
11 votes -
How much research is being written by large language models?
14 votes -
The complex question of screen influence on youth
14 votes -
New Foundations is consistent - a difficult mathematical proof proved computationally using Lean
10 votes -
Reducing late-night alcohol sales curbed all violent crimes by 23% annually in Baltimore
33 votes -
Chimp moms play with their offspring through good times and bad
11 votes -
Argentina president Javier Milei’s actions after taking office have research institutions facing shutdown. Scientists protest.
18 votes -
Having self-control leads to power: a new study with 3,500 people finds that showing self-control influences how powerful an individual is perceived to be by their peers
20 votes -
What's an obelisk, anyway?
25 votes -
‘It’s insane’: New viruslike entities found in human gut microbes
30 votes -
The Hawthorne effect in human resource management is based on unreliable studies
17 votes -
Embracing idiosyncrasies over optimization: The path to innovation in biotechnological design
3 votes -
Magpies swoop bald men more often, eight-year-old's viral survey finds
34 votes -
Hacking the climate - 37c3
7 votes -
The origin of mysterious green ‘ghosts’ in the sky has been discovered
18 votes -
Denmark is building on the success of blockbuster drugs – the country's focus on reinvestment is feeding a stream of discovery
7 votes -
Scientists discovered why Germany’s wild boar are radioactive
26 votes -
July 2023 was the hottest month on record
29 votes -
‘We’re changing the clouds.’ An unforeseen test of geoengineering is fueling record ocean warmth.
80 votes -
Cyberattack shutters major National Science Foundation-funded telescopes for more than two weeks
18 votes -
North Atlantic Oscillation contributes to 'cold blob' in Atlantic Ocean
10 votes -
Mundane participation: Power imbalances in youth media use
5 votes -
Sinéad Griffin of Lawrence Berkeley National Lab publishes simulations supporting LK-99 as a room temperature superconductor
84 votes -
Citizen science
9 votes -
Citizen science observation of a gamma-ray glow associated with the initiation of a lightning flash
5 votes -
How culture affects the ‘Marshmallow Test’
42 votes -
How scientific conferences are responding to US abortion bans and anti-LGBTQ+ laws
32 votes -
Superconductor chaos
8 votes -
For a billion years of Earth's history our days were only nineteen hours long, finds new study
26 votes