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What do your Neanderthal genes do?

Ann Gibbons |
By sequencing a remarkably complete genome from a 50,000-year-old bone fragment of a female Neandertal found in Vindija Cave in ...
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Humans are still evolving–the evidence is in how we age and who survives

Although human evolution is seen as in the distant past, every minute biological decision results in ongoing human natural selection ...
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‘Final-cause thinking’: Does biology and evolution need to be ‘purposeful’?

Michael Ruse |
In the world of evolutionary biology, in particular, there is still a huge amount of final-cause thinking, despite the fact ...
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Video: Evolution at work–RNA in New York City mice has changed so they can eat fast food

With all its hustle, bustle, concrete, and congestion, they say New York City changes people. And that may be true, ...
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How cosmology and creation coincide

William Carroll |
Big Bang cosmology tells us that the universe has a beginning. Therefore, the universe as a whole has a cause; ...
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Our Neanderthal ancestors affect how we look and act today

Jen Viegas |
Neanderthals are the closest evolutionary relatives identified to date of all people living today. They are so close to us ...
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Are you reading this because you want to? Or because the neurons in your brain want you to?

Ari Schulman |
If you’ve ever read an article proclaiming that neuroscience disproves free will, you’ve probably heard of the Libet experiment. … ...
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The role of emotions in problem solving

Ari Schulman |
What is the purpose of emotion? More elaborately, how do the psychological and neurological mechanisms of emotion underlie a person’s ...
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Being obese doesn’t always mean you are metabolically unhealthy

Peter Janiszewski |
To date, countless epidemiological studies have shown that as you move from a normal weight (BMI = 18.5-24.9 kg/m2) towards ...
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Do GMOs, pesticides cause cancer? The Amish would say ‘no’

Andrew Porterfield |
Amish farmers may not get cancer as much, but it's not because they don't use pesticides or GMOs. In fact, ...
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Matrix phobia? Scientists put fears to rest—we are not living in computer simulation

Andrew Masterson |
Just in case it’s been weighing on your mind, you can relax now. A team of theoretical physicists from Oxford ...
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New species may be created by cellular ‘mitonuclear conflict’

Carrie Arnold |
In the complex cells of humans and other organisms, two different genomes collaborate to sustain life. The larger genome, with ...
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Once and for all, Ashkenazi Jews have limited Euro-Asian Khazarian heritage

Alexander Beider |
Since the late 19th century, the so-called “Khazarian theory” has promoted the idea that a bulk of Ashkenazic Jews living ...
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Guided evolution of wheat and other grains could feed growing population

David Warmflash |
Can we breed wheat and other cereal grains with the ability to fertilize themselves? Researchers report promising results that could ...
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Is ‘dark DNA’ lurking as ‘missing’ mystery force in animal evolution?

Adam Hargreaves |
In some animals, stretches of essential DNA seem to be missing. However, this "dark DNA" is not really missing, it's ...
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Mom was right: We get wiser with age and manage stress better

Victor Gomes |
[Professor Dilip] Jeste points out that some things get better with age, like the ability to make decisions, control emotions, ...
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Viewpoint: What are the odds on the future of humanity?

Caleb Scharf |
The more we learn about the history of our own world, and the wider solar system, the more we see ...
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Who gave humans genital herpes? Maybe this ancient ancestor

Dana Dovey |
Genital herpes infects about one in six American adults. But who was patient zero, the individual responsible for this irritating scourge? Researchers in ...
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Sudden increase in Zika’s potency linked to small mutation

Donald McNeil, Pam Belluck |
It remains one of the great mysteries of the Zika epidemic: Why did a virus that existed for decades elsewhere ...
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Why evolution does not weed out all genetic diseases

Peter Hess |
To anyone with a basic understanding of evolution, it should seem puzzling that deadly genetic diseases, passed on from one generation to ...
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Is society ready or willing to embrace an Artificial Intelligence deity?

Olivia Solon |
Intranet service? Check. Autonomous motorcycle? Check. Driverless car technology? Check. Obviously the next logical project for a successful Silicon Valley ...
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Collapsing bubbles may have given rise to life

Alex Berezow |
The origin of life is a profound mystery. Once life arose, natural selection and evolution took over, but the question ...
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Lee Berger: Paleoanthropologist ‘rewriting’ human evolutionary history

Colin Barras |
[Lee Berger] is the palaeoanthropologist behind the recent discoveries of not one but two new species of human ancestor. The ...
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Tick tock, circadian clock research wins Nobel Prize—and why it may help us sleep and travel to Mars

Ben Locwin |
Our clock system is in organisms across the planet. Better understanding of our internal body rhythms may help pave the ...
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Lava tube cities could be key to colonization of Moon and Mars

Sarah Sloat |
[R]esearchers at the European Planetary Science Congress, an annual meeting of that serves as a “dissemination platform” for new space studies, ...
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Will ‘reviving’ extinct species lead to ecological quandaries?

Joseph Brean |
The gastric brooding frog is no regular frog. Like some horror story of ancient myth, it gives birth out of ...
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Your DNA may have been altered by childhood stress and traumas

Lorena Lara |
[W]e’re finding out that our DNA isn’t always set in stone. Now, a team of researchers from Northwestern University led ...