- Nail Polish Made From Ping Pong Balls? by Ms. Beautyphile
- The Chemistry of Paper and Polymer Banknotes by Andy Brunning at Compound Interest
- The Slow Poisoning of the UK’s Bees (and What to Do About It) by Diana Crow at Confessions of a Fledgling Science Journalist
- Brains + Sex = Controversy by Neuroskeptic at Discover
- Left Brain, Right Brain, Red Brain, Blue Brain by Barbara Spencer at NeuWrite San Diego
- How Different Parts of the Brain Co-operate by Bruno Dubuc at The Brain from Top to Bottom Blog
- Eyeing up intake: an Insight on overconsumption and diet by Sian Williams at Global Food Security blog
- Do Dolphins Dream of Space Travel? by Lucianne Walkowicz at Scientific American
- Quantum teleportation over 7 kilometres of cables smashes record by Anil Ananthaswamy at New Scientist
- The most detailed look yet at how early humans left Africa by Emily Benson at New Scientist
- Map Shows Every River That Flows to the Mighty Mississippi by Betsy Mason at National Geographic
- The Earth is Changing on Human Timescales by Becky Nevin at Cosmic Chatter
- Why correlations of CO2 and Temperature over ice age cycles don’t define climate sensitivity by Gavin Schmidt at RealClimate
- Humboldt biography wins Royal Society Prize by Barbara Kiser at A View From the Bridge
- The Problem With Science Writing by Trevor Quirk at Nautilus
- Bacteria Evolving Resistance by Steven Novella at NeurologicaBlog
- Student Stress and USMLE Step 1 by Sukhjot Sandher at The Doctor's Tablet blog
- The Chan-Zuckerberg Initiative by Derek Lowe at In The Pipeline
- Zuckerberg se une a Gates en su propósito de erradicar las enfermedades del mundo by Sergio Parra at Xataka Ciencia
9.26.2016
ScienceSeeker Editor's Selections September 19-25 2016 #sciseekpicks #scicomm
Each week, the ScienceSeeker editors pick their favourite posts within their respective areas of interest and expertise. Here is a round-up of the Science Seeker Editors’ Selections for the past week:
9.19.2016
ScienceSeeker Editor's Selections September 12-18 2016 #sciseekpicks #scicomm
Each week, the ScienceSeeker editors pick their favourite posts within their respective areas of interest and expertise. Here is a round-up of the Science Seeker Editors’ Selections for the past week:
- If This Timeline Doesn't Convince You Climate Change Is Real, Nothing Will by Mary Beth Griggs at Popular Science
- Expresso or Americano? Your genome has the answer by Rosa García-Verdugo at Mapping Ignorance
- Ask a Physicist: How Much Energy is in Me? by Stephen Skolnick at Physics Buzz
- The Dawn of Biodegradable Robots by Jonathan Winfield, Jonathan Rossiter and Ioannis Ieropoulos at ACS Green Chemistry Nexus
- What you eat when you’re sick may determine if you’ll get better by Debora Mackenzie at New Scientist
- The Cancer Moonshot: Hype versus reality by David Gorskon at Science-Based Medicine
- Where does the flu come from every year? by Matt Wood at ScienceLife
- The story of the first bone marrow transplant by Jovana Drinjakovic at Signals Blog
- Finding mushrooms with your mobile phone by Ingrid P Nuse at ScienceNordic
- Cosmic neutrinos detected, confirming the Big Bang’s last great prediction by Ethan Siegel at Starts With A Bang!
- ABC and FLT by Bryan Hayes at bit-player
- Evolución de la resistencia a antibióticos en video by David Castro at Expresión Genética
9.12.2016
ScienceSeeker Editor's Selections September 5-11 2016 #sciseekpicks #scicomm
Each week, the ScienceSeeker editors pick their favourite posts within their respective areas of interest and expertise. Here is a round-up of the Science Seeker Editors’ Selections for the past week:
Check back next week for more great picks!
- Comet Lander Philae Finally Found Just a Month Before the End of Mission by Phil Plait at Bad Astronomy
- Fifth fundamental force: fact or fiction? by Ethan Siegel at Starts With A Bang!
- Scientists need your help to build a quantum computer by Henrik Bendix at ScienceNordic
- Ada Lovelace and Grace Hopper Deserve to be On Top by AHazard42 at It's Elementary!
- Scientists film bacteria's maneuvers as they become impervious to drugs at PhysOrg
- In First, UN Will Consider Antibiotic Resistance by Maryn Mckenna at Germination
- It’s official: The five-second rule is down for the count by Beth Mole at Ars Technica
- Antimicrobial chemicals found with antibiotic-resistance genes in indoor dust at Lunatic Labs
- Doing exercise may counteract some of alcohol’s deadly effects at New Scientist
- Biomaterials and the “ouch” factor in Olympics and sports by Hamideh Emrani at Signals Blog
- The ethics and value of responsible animal research at Speaking of Research
- Snails Are Going Extinct: Here's Why That Matters by John R. Platt at Scientific American
- Genetic Choreography of the Developing Human Embryo by Ricki Lewis at DNA Science Blog
- Awe-inspiring documentaries could turn people away from science by Christian Jarrett at BPS Research Digest
- Why Humanities Majors Should Take Science Courses by Yoo Jun Kim at Sci Ed In the Lab and Beyond
- Mind Games: Tetris as a Tool for Neuroscience #2 by Lexie Thorpe at Cogitales
- Can You Improve Physical Skills While Dreaming? by Carla Clark at Brain Blogger
- Un atleta lo hace mejor si le mientes sobre su marca by Sergio Parra at Xataka Ciencia
9.05.2016
ScienceSeeker Editor's Selections August 29-September 4 2016 #sciseekpicks #scicomm
Each week, the ScienceSeeker editors pick their favourite posts within their respective areas of interest and expertise. Here is a round-up of the Science Seeker Editors’ Selections for the past week:
- Are We Eating Our Way To Alzheimer's? by Dermot Barry at Brain Sponge Blog
- Can Pokemon Go solve the physical inactivity epidemic? by Peter Janiszewski at Obesity Panacea
- The Chemistry of Blackberry Colour by Andy Brunning at Compound Interest
- In Defense of “Pseudoscience” by Steven Novella at Neurologica Blog
- Wisdom is more of a state than a trait and No reason to smile – Another modern psychology classic has failed to replicate by Christian Jarrett at British Psychological Society Research Digest
- Neuron See, Neuron Do: The Mirror Neuron System and Clinical Implications by Jenn Tribble at Knowing Neurons
- SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket apparently blew up during a test firing Thursday by Eric Berger at Ars Technica
- Ask Ethan: How many stars in the night sky still exist? by Ethan Siegel at Starts With A Bang!
- Hunting For the Most Distant Galaxy Cluster by Tao Wang at NASA Chandra X-ray Observatory Blog
- How Much More Can We Learn About the Universe? by Lawrence M Krauss at Nautilus
- Americans Now More Politically Polarized On Climate Change Than Ever Before, Analysis Finds by Graham Readfern at DeSmogBlog
- Jeff: My IBL Story by Jeff Shriner at A Novice IBL Blog