Friday, April 20, 2012

Issue for the week of May 5th, 2012

  • Visitors carry unwelcome species into a once pristine environment (p. 20)

  • Planetary scientists seek to fill in gaps in outer solar system?s formative years (p. 24)

  • Heart-healthy drugs show promise against inflammation, cancer and the flu (p. 30)

  • Monkeys learn to distinguish words from nonwords, suggesting ancient evolutionary roots for reading. (p. 5)

  • Unusual field tests reveal how common insecticides, even at nonfatal doses, can erode colonies and threaten the future of bumblebees and honeybees. (p. 8)

  • A trio of fossils from China may tip the scales on dinosaurs? public image. (p. 9)

  • A small molecule called kartogenin prompts the manufacture of lost connective tissue in mice. (p. 10)

  • A mouse version of Epstein-Barr seems to prevent, not trigger, symptoms of the autoimmune disease. (p. 10)

  • For most conditions, knowing a person?s entire genetic makeup won?t help predict his or her medical history. (p. 11)

  • Tests on high-stakes math problems reveal key regions of brain activity linked to choking under pressure. (p. 12)

  • Stroke patients treated with brain stimulation show improvement in language skills. (p. 12)

  • Seeing images of food revs up reward areas in the obese and slows them down in severely underweight people, a brain scan study shows. (p. 13)

  • A study in mice links a high-fat diet to changes in the brain that might encourage weight gain. (p. 14)

  • Related developmental disorders affect 1.1 percent of U.S. 8-year-olds. (p. 14)

  • Compacting soil means the flood-prone city continues to sink. (p. 15)

  • Genes, not environment, play a key role in the prized fungus?s scent. (p. 16)

  • Analytical technique could lead to better crime scene investigation. (p. 16)

  • New measurements of distant galaxies support Einstein?s cosmological constant as the explanation for the universe?s accelerating expansion. (p. 17)

  • String theory?s take on the Higgs, newborn pulsars may have iron by-products, and coupled neutrons in beryllium nuclei revealed. (p. 17)

  • By 3.4 million years ago, two human relatives built differently for upright movement inhabited East Africa. (p. 18)

  • A South Africa cave yields the oldest secure evidence for a blaze controlled by human ancestors. (p. 18)

  • A proposed invisibility cloak for heat could shield computers or satellites from high temperatures. (p. 19)

  • Review by Bruce Bower (p. 34)

  • Review by Nathan Seppa (p. 34)

  • (p. 34)

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  • (p. 34)

  • (p. 4)

  • (p. 4)

  • (p. 4)

  • (p. 35)

  • Scientific method acting (p. 36)

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