- World’s First 'Menstrual Cycle in a Dish' Simulates Female Body by Erika Engelhaupt at National Geographic
- How the changing of the clocks affects your brain by Simon Oxenham at Neurobonkers
- A scientific measure of our visual imagination suggests it is surprisingly limited by Alex Fradera at British Psychological Society Research Digest
- Food for Thought: Do We Owe Our Large Primate Brains to a Passion for Fruit? by Bret Stetka at Scientific American
- How understanding animals can help us make the most of artificial intelligence by Heather Roff at The Conversation
- Golden Retrievers, Terriers, and Artificial Neural Networks by Ege Yalcinbas at Neuwrite San Diego
- On the under-studied populations within the autism spectrum by Paul Whiteley at Questioning Answers
- Why Are Giant Pandas Black And White? by GrrlScientist
- Darwin Was a Slacker and You Should Be Too by Alex Soojung-Kim Pang at Nautilus
- An Introduction to Taxonomy: or, Come look at this cool bug I found, what is it?!? by Ben Padilla at Ben Pedilla Educology
- The 10 Weirdest Things in the Solar System by Lydia Chain, Lee Billings and Michael Lemonick at Scientific American
- Interview with a Theoretical Physicist: Sabine Hossenfelder at Physics Forums
- What will happen when Betelgeuse explodes? by Ethan Siegel at Starts With A Bang!
- Combating Chemoresistance: Blocking DNA Repair to Fight Cancer by Andy Brunning at Compound Interest
- Jelly Belly: Elusive Deep Sea Octopus Takes Its Gelatinous Meals To Go by Christie Wilcox at Science Sushi
- Journey into the Plastisphere by Shanna Baker at Hakai Magazine
- On Thin Ice: Disappearing Zooplankton Could Collapse Arctic Food Chain by Gloria Dickie at Arctic Deeply
- American Doctors Are Killing Themselves and No One Is Talking About It by Gabrielle Glaser at The Daily Beast
- Why Germany and not Japan is the leader in renewable energy by Jessica Jewell at IIASA Nexus
- PBS is the only network reporting on climate change. Trump wants to cut it by Dana Nuccitelli at Skeptical Science
- A Radical Science Movement Rises Again by Alexis Takahashi at Free Radicals
- Pre-Bötzinger Complex: How Deep Breathing Promotes Tranquility by Dan Modano at Reliawire
- Book Review: "The Brain Defense", Kevin Davis at Neuroskeptic
- A Long-Sought Proof, Found and Almost Lost by Natalie Wolchover at Quanta Magazine
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4.03.2017
ScienceSeeker Editor's Selections March 27-April 2 2017 #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!
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