July 17th, 2013
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Linear Higgs, 4 Quark Mystery, Blitzars and Blue Planets, Human Language Is Old, Sharks Are Awesome, Cat Poop, Dark Matter Ponderings, Battling The Bugs, Life In Vostok, Moth Sex, Sphinxes, And Much More…
Disclaimer, disclaimer, disclaimer!!!
The world around us is filled with information.
Quantitative, qualitative, subjective and objective data swirl around us in every instant of our conscious daily activities…
From mental meandering over the myriad of detailed minutia that are present in each moment of observation…
To the less conscious calculations of the motor cortex, predictively plotting fleshy limb travel through landscapes of gravity, trajectory, distance and time…
We reason, we reduce, we reuse and recycle rational and irrational judgments in algorithmic responses to our allegorical reality…
We don’t know everything, can’t know everything of this world in the real time flow with which it unfolds…
So overwhelmingly abundant is the potential amount of sensory and cognitive input we could be putting into our brains that the brain refrains from putting up with much of it at all… and instead filters out much and narrows down some until a refined sense of knowing some things about the world is what we ultimately allow to be put into our head…
And so we must gesticulate our bodies and minds through time and space with a great deal of generalized guessing… mostly make-ity-upping the world as we go a long…
The only thing that it can be said we know of reality with any measure of certainty
The only fact our minds can with crystal clarity and concrete conviction rely upon in this un-correlative data collection of swirling chaos and cosmic uncertainty
The only truth before us that can truly be said to be self-evident is
This week in science… coming up next
One word. Blitzars.
Maybe they explain FRBs?
Blue planets don’t always mean water
Sometimes they mean the air is made of liquid glass.
Sharks! smart and sneaky…
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Dark matters to ponder
Where is it?
Cat poop problem
There is way too much of it. And, it’s full of Toxo.
Beating disease!
Mosquito disease on the run
A second pesticide receptor discovered that might be useful in the ever escalating war against malaria.
Vaccine for birds
A potential vaccine for West Nile virus created.
Blocking disease with gene therapy…
Two tales of success!
Life in Vostok?
The answer so far is YES!
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Tags: Blair Bazdarich, Dr. Kiki, Justin Jackson, Kirsten Sanford, news, podcast, radio, science, talk, technology, This Week in Science, TWIS
Posted in agriculture, animals, anthropology, astrobiology, astronomy, astronomy, bioethics, biology, biotechnology, Black Holes, cell biology, clinical trials, cognitive psychology, cognitive science, conservationism, cosmology, Dark matter, deep sky, deep space, ecology, emergent behavior, end of the world, endangered animals, engineering, evolution, exploration, extrasolar planets, fish, galaxies, genetics, infectious diseases, insects, linguistics, mammals, marine biology, medicine, microbiology, molecular biology, NASA, nutrition, paleontology, pharmacology, physiology, planets, podcast, psychobiology, psychology, robots, science, science and politics, Science Education, science history, Science Music, sexuality, sexy scientists, sharks, space, space exploration, stars, technology, therapies, Toxoplasma, world robot domination, z-Broadcasts | 2 Comments »
July 17th, 2013
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Linear Higgs, 4 Quark Mystery, Naked Mole Rats Fight Cancer, Time For Mars?, Interview With Brian Switek, Author And Dinosaur Expert, And Much More…
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Higgs goes linear?
What’s got 4 quarks and wasn’t expected to exist?
No show is complete without a few naked mole rats…
this time, they fight cancer.
Time for Mars?
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Brian Switek is a freelance science writer specializing in evolution, paleontology, and natural history. His blog Laelaps is part of the Phenomena “science salon” at National Geographic.
Brian’s new book – My Beloved Brontosaurus: On the Road with Old Bones, New Science, and Our Favorite Dinosaurs – has just been published by Scientific American/Farrar, Straus and Giroux. His critically acclaimed debut – Written in Stone: Evolution, the Fossil Record, and Our Place in Nature – is available through Bellevue Literary Press and Icon Books.
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Tags: Brian Switek, Dr. Kiki, Justin Jackson, Kirsten Sanford, news, podcast, radio, science, talk, technology, This Week in Science, TWIS
Posted in amphibians, animals, anthropology, archeology, arthropods, astronomy, astronomy, bioethics, biology, biotechnology, birds, cancer, cell biology, chemistry, civilian space travel, cnidarians, conservationism, crustaceans, echinoderms, ecology, emergent behavior, end of the world, endangered animals, engineering, evolution, exploration, fish, genetics, geology, global warming, insects, mammals, medicine, microbiology, molecular biology, mollusks, NASA, nutrition, paleontology, particle physics, pharmacology, physicists, physics, physiology, planets, podcast, quantum physics, reptiles, robots, science, science and politics, Science Education, science history, Science Music, sexy scientists, sharks, space, space exploration, spacecraft, sponges, stem cells, technology, theoretical physics, therapies, world robot domination, worms, z-Broadcasts | 1 Comment »
June 28th, 2013
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Voyager and Tunguska Updates, Hot Lamprey Sex, Shellfish History Lessons, Black Hole Confusion, Sterile Space Travel, Universal Cave Drawings, TWI World Robot Domination, Brain Recordings, A Brief History of Photosynthesis, And Much More…
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Voyager 1… still hasn’t left the solar system
And, Tunguska was caused by a meteorite
Lamprey sex heats up
Do shellfish tell us about our past?
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A Question: How sterile is sterile enough?
TWIWRD
Cheetah-cub runs like a cat
New ways to record from brains
And then there was photosynthesis
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Tags: Dr. Kiki, Justin Jackson, Kirsten Sanford, news, podcast, radio, science, talk, technology, This Week in Science, TWIS
Posted in agriculture, animals, anthropology, archeology, astrobiology, astronomy, astrophysics, bioethics, bioethics, biology, biotechnology, Black Holes, cell biology, chemistry, civilian space travel, cognitive science, computer science, crustaceans, deep space, ecology, emergent behavior, end of the world, energy, engineering, evolution, exploration, fish, genetics, geology, global warming, insects, KDVS, marine biology, medicine, microbiology, molecular biology, mollusks, nanotechnology, NASA, neuroscience, nutrition, paleontology, physics, planets, podcast, psychology, robots, science, science and politics, Science Education, science history, Science Music, seti, sexuality, sexy scientists, space, space exploration, spacecraft, stem cells, technology, world robot domination, z-Broadcasts | 1 Comment »
June 14th, 2013
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An Interview W/ Biomedical Engineer Dr. Andrew Putnam, Pass The Grains, Tiny Primates, Old Old Plankton, Cometary Life, Toxo-Water!, Kinky Squid Sex, Bond Formation, Drought By North, And Much More…
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Interview with Dr. Andrew Putnam, Associate Professor, Biomedical Engineering, University of Michigan.
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Paleo diet? Naaah… Pass the grains
Also, a tiny primate!
3 billion year old plankton fossils!
Comets may have been responsible for all life on earth!
Toxoplasmosis – it’s in the water!!
Squid sex – much kinkier than you thought
Let’s bond!
Drought in 1980’s in Africa caused at least in part by aerosols in Northern Hemisphere
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Tags: bioengineering, Dr. Kiki, Justin Jackson, Kirsten Sanford, news, podcast, radio, science, talk, technology, This Week in Science, TWIS
Posted in agriculture, animals, anthropology, archeology, astrobiology, australia bashing, bioethics, bioethics, biology, biotechnology, cell biology, chemistry, cnidarians, cognitive science, cosmology, diy tech, ecology, emergent behavior, end of the world, endangered animals, engineering, evolution, genetics, global warming, mammals, marine biology, medicine, microbiology, molecular biology, nanotechnology, NASA, nutrition, paleontology, planets, podcast, robots, science, science and politics, Science Education, science history, Science Music, sexuality, sexy scientists, space, technology, therapies, z-Broadcasts | 1 Comment »
June 13th, 2013
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Not So Random, Doomsday Higgs, Size Matters, Anxious Fish, Interview w/ Dr. Brian Hare About Dognition, And Much More…
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Stem cells raise the specter of cloning
Researchers have developed a way to produce human embryonic stem cells using somatic nuclear transfer. The media has decided to focus on potentials in cloning, but the real breakthrough here is in potential cell therapy.
Smoking Pot could make you skinny
People who smoke marijuana have better control over their blood sugar, and are often more fit. There you go folks, another reason to smoke.
The Cicadas are Coming!!!
30 billion cicadas are about to envelope the East Coast of the United States. Buckle your seat-belts and strap on your noise-canceling headphones – it’s GONNA GET LOUD.
Meanwhile, from the UN:
The UN urges us to eat more bugs. Which begs the question…:
Maple Cicada Cupcakes, Anyone?
The impending onslaught of cicadas could be an opportunity for a rare unusual feast! Oh, me? No thanks, I’m full…
You mean to tell me spiders are working together?!
Out of the 43,000 species only 80 are social. The Huntsman spider from Australia often nests in groups with younger and older siblings mixed. It turns out that the youngsters benefit from having older siblings around, as they sometimes share their prey. What good big brothers and sisters! *shudder*…
Brain dominance linked to your cell phone habits
If you are left brain dominant in your language center you use your right had to hold your cell phone to your head. This had little to do with handedness. Interesting stuff!
Get a free audiobook at Audible.com!
Stretching the tissue
Acupuncture needles appear to have a proven effect on pain. The needle causes a tug against the connective tissue and stretches it. This stretch changes the tissue chemically – acupuncture may actually have a scientific benefit. Science supporting old school medicine – who’d have thought?
Gravity at the end of the universe!
A device proposed by scientists at the University of Nevada Reno and Stanford University could detect gravitational waves at the end of the universe. Far out, man…
Not Real Trees!
Berkeley Lab has created a nano system that is photosynthetic. The first artificial leaf! Yay?
Life Undergound???
A mine in Canada has been deemed “the Galapagos of the subsurface.” Evidence suggests it has been isolated from the rest of the planet for 2.6 billion years, so finding microbes in the water there could be very telling.
Malaria parasites are chatting it up behind our backs
Malaria parasites can signal to each other the best time to activate in a host. We’re doomed!
Car exhaust: bad for you.
Emissions from your car could turn good cholesterol from good to bad. Another reason fossil fuels are evil…
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Posted in agriculture, alternative energy, animals, anthropology, arthropods, australia bashing, bioethics, bioethics, biology, biotechnology, cancer, cell biology, chemistry, cognitive psychology, cognitive science, conservationism, ecology, emergent behavior, end of the world, endangered animals, energy, engineering, evolution, genetics, global warming, infectious diseases, insects, mammals, mathematics, medicine, microbiology, molecular biology, neuroscience, nutrition, ozone, pandas, physiology, podcast, psychology, robots, science, science and politics, Science Education, science history, Science Music, sexy scientists, solar power, stem cells, technology, therapies, world robot domination, worms, z-Broadcasts | 2 Comments »
May 30th, 2013
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Oh, Climate, How art thou?
A russian lake formed from asteroid impact has given us information on what things were like 3.6 million years ago. It turns out the earth was very warm – around 15 degrees warmer, to be precise!
And, it turns out that humans didn’t kill out the megafauna, the climate did. That doesn’t mean you’re off the hook, poachers…
Deepwater effects
Water on the Moon? It came from close to home…
The water on the moon came from the same place ours did! This calls into question everything we know about la luna. Uh oh!
A new kind of antivenom
Scientists in Brazil have engineered an antivenom for spider bites in a lab without withdrawing venom from the animals or injecting others to harvest antibodies. Where will the out of work snake-charmers go now?!
Your Dog may save your life, and not just if you fall in a well
According to the American Heart Association, dog owners are at a decreased risk for heart disease – so go rescue a dog today, it could save your life!
Western Black Rhino Officially extinct
Sad News.
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Antibody Cures?
Migraines are a mystery to the scientific community, but it appears that one protein is usually present. Scientists have developed an antibody to target this protein – HOORAY – wait… ouch… shhh…
A heroine vaccine?
How about you just don’t take it to begin with…
How private is your DNA?
An artist has created portraits from DNA left in public places. Is this an invasion of privacy? Is our DNA sacred?
Things our ancestors said
Researchers found “superfamilies” of languages linking many of ours together. Looking back 15,000 years they found 23 words we all have in common today. Huzzah!
Nobody likes a fat talker
Stop talking about your weight! No one likes it.
It’s all about the ladies
Ladies prefer to talk about themselves, and to be interrupted by men. Um… the jury’s out on this one…
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Tags: Dr. Kiki, Justin Jackson, Kirsten Sanford, news, podcast, radio, science, talk, technology, This Week in Science, TWIS
Posted in animals, anthropology, archeology, bioethics, bioethics, biology, biotechnology, cell biology, chemistry, clinical trials, cognitive psychology, cognitive science, conservationism, ecology, emergent behavior, end of the world, endangered animals, engineering, evolution, FDA, genetics, geology, global warming, information technology, insects, mammals, medicine, microbiology, molecular biology, NASA, neuroscience, nutrition, paleontology, pharmacology, physiology, planets, podcast, psychology, reptiles, robots, science, science and politics, Science Education, science history, Science Music, sexuality, sexy scientists, space, technology, therapies, z-Broadcasts | 2 Comments »
May 23rd, 2013
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SpaceShipTwo Goes Airborne, Little Movies, Saturnian Hurricanes, Chinese Flu News, Torpor Or Hibernation?, Birds For Boys, Men Vs Women, Island Chihuahuas?, Tunguska Meteorite Samples, HPV For Cancer, Think You’re Old?, And Much More…
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Some headlines!
Virgin Galactic’s SpaceShipTwo completed a successful test flight this past Monday. Launched from aboard WhiteKnight Two out of Mojave, CA, the space plane reached 55,000 feet before returning to earth. Virgin Galactic expects to achieve full space flight by the end of this year, and will be offering flights for $200,000 to anyone willing and able to pony up the cash.
In a new twist on stop-motion films, IBM created the first ever movie in the genre that takes place at the atomic scale. Called A Boy and His Dog, the short took 10 days of 18 hour long shifts, two scanning tunneling microscopes, and 5000 carbon monoxide molecules to create the 242 atomic frames.
NASA’s Cassini spacecraft sent back stunning images of a giant hurricane-like storm on Saturn. It’s 1250 miles in diameter with winds registering around 300 miles an hour. Unlike earthly hurricanes, the one on Saturn is locked to the north pole. And, with little water vapor in its atmosphere and no land formations to speak of, nobody really knows where such strong winds come from. Hurricane scientists here on Earth are excited to study it to learn more about hurricanes on our own planet.
Now, for discussion:
Chinese virologists interested in studying how changes in the flu virus allow it to jump between species, namely from birds to swine, and on to humans, have created a hybrid of the H5N1 bird flu and H1N1 swine flu in their lab. The hybrid virus they created is the best of both strains in that it is not only very easily transmissible, but also extremely lethal. Only guinea pigs were infected in this experiment, but is it worth the risk?
Hibernating monkeys?!
Well not monkeys, but eastern dwarf lemurs. These primates hibernate not to avoid the cold as in other mammals, but to avoid dry spells when resources are limited. Could this be forced in humans for hibernation therapy or science-fictiony needs? 3013 here I come!
Cannibalistic Maggots!
In crowded laboratpry conditions, fruit fly larvae will often persue, attack, and consume one another. Despite the flies’ herbivorous tendencies, if their parents, or even their parents’ parents, were reared in hard times, their offspring would be more likely to cannibalise. Try going to sleep now, eh?
Bluebirds favor boys
Bluebird parents favor sons over daughters, and favor bright colored sons over dull ones. Sure, everyone has favorites, but do other parents sarve their less-than-favorite offspring to death? I hope not…
Antibiotic for men protects them from women
After using a placebo masked as antibiotics, men were more trusting of attractive women. However, those who took the real antibiotics were unbiased in relation to attractiveness. Do antibiotics affect thought processes?
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Island Dwarfism – Could it explain homo floresiensis?
Chihuahuas, african grey parrots, are these also island dwarfism cases? Let’s discuss…
Tunguska fragments uncovered!
The Siberian cometary mystery in 1908 that flattened trees may have a breakthrough! Someone has come forward with three rocks that he claims are meteorites from the explosion. Or was it Nikola Tesla’s experiments? You decide…
HPV vaccine – it’s not just for cancer…
A new argument states that perhaps we should focus HPV vaccine pitches on preventing STD’s instead of on preventing cancer. Wait… What? We need to get our priorities straight.
The secret to longer life is in your head.
Researchers at Einstein College have found that the hypothalamus is the key to aging, at least in mice. That means you’re only as old as your hypothalamus thinks you are.
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Posted in aerospace, animals, anthropology, archeology, astronauts, avian flu, aviation, bioethics, bioethics, biology, birds, cancer, cell biology, chemistry, civilian space travel, cognitive psychology, cognitive science, conservationism, ecology, emergent behavior, end of the world, engineering, evolution, exploration, FDA, genetics, geology, infectious diseases, insects, mammals, medicine, meteorology, microbiology, molecular biology, NASA, neuroscience, nutrition, paleontology, pharmacology, physics, physiology, podcast, psychology, robots, science, science and politics, Science Education, science history, Science Music, sexy scientists, sleep, space, space exploration, spacecraft, technology, therapies, z-Broadcasts | 5 Comments »
May 17th, 2013

The Mars Draft, Bird Flu News, Hobbitses, Vervet Mimics, Yay God, Near Death Hibernation, No Memory, Being A Genius, Radioactive Bacteria, Origin Of Limbs, And Much More…
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Want to Live on Mars?
10,000 people have already thrown their hat in the ring to colonize Mars. It only costs $38 – what do you have to lose?!
Bird Flu – Deja-vu?
The new strain of bird flu, H7N9, has been called “one of the most lethal so far” by the World Health Organization. Time to break out the surgical masks, people!
Hobbits don’t come from the shire, they come from Indonesia.
Homo floresiensis, the hobbit-like relative to humans found in 2003 has been shrouded in mystery, until now. By looking at their brains, or rather their skulls, scientists identified island dwarfism of homo erectus as their origin.
When in South Africa, do as the vervet monkeys do.
Vervet monkeys have exhibited cultural change dependent on the habits of locals. Are they just trying to act cool, or is there an advantage to mimicking social norms? It’s too soon to say…
Playing God – Yay or Nay?
Just because we can bring back extinct species, should we? Let’s discuss…
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Near Death
A resuscitation scientist can tell us quite a bit about near-death experiences, and what it means to be “dead.” He claims that consciousness continues for up to a few hours after death, although in a hibernation state. Creepy…
Amnesia… what were we talking about?
A man dubbed E.P. suffered from viral encephalitis and as a result contracted amnesia reaching back to his 30’s. Unconscious familiarity remained, but his life history and long-term memory were lost forever. What is memory anyway?!
Einstein – Always right, Always a genius.
Radioactive bacteria attack cancer
Grandpa Coelacanth
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Posted in agriculture, animals, anthropology, archeology, astrobiology, astronauts, astronomy, avian flu, bioethics, bioethics, biology, biotechnology, cancer, cell biology, chemistry, chickens, civilian space travel, cognitive science, conservationism, ecology, emergent behavior, end of the world, endangered animals, evolution, exploration, fish, genetics, infectious diseases, mammals, marine biology, medicine, microbiology, molecular biology, NASA, neuroscience, nutrition, paleontology, physicists, physics, planets, podcast, psychology, quantum physics, relativity, robots, science, science and politics, Science Education, science history, Science Music, sexy scientists, space, space exploration, spacecraft, technology, therapies, z-Broadcasts | No Comments »