I’ve Got Your Missing Links Right Here (17 May 2014)
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Top picks
Is This Mind-Controlled Exoskeleton Science or Spectacle? Very good Greg Miller piece on Miguel Nicolelis’ World Cup ambition. It doesn’t inspire confidence when a scientist refuses to talk to a journalist who included critical voices in previous coverage.
How the Syrian civil war is destroying the historic Aleppo pepper. Maryn McKenna on fine form at National Geographic’s new food blog, The Plate.
12,000 yrs ago, a teenage girl fell in a cave, broke her hip, and died. And now, we can sequence her DNA.
On the lives of sociable spiders, by Natalie Angier.
“Sugar is not only complex, it’s iniquitous.” Wonderful Ann Finkbeiner essay on sugar chemistry.
I totally agree with Virginia Hughes’ piece on the travails of health reporting. Perhaps we need less of it. Relatedly, this story says that researchers found that journalists do a lousy job of reporting on health studies, when it was actually a journalist who found that out. Ring the irony klaxon!
This is a really clear explainer from Carl Zimmer on “junk DNA” and what it does and doesn’t mean
“We need to resist the urge to interpret our personal microbiome data.” Important piece by Tami Lieberman.
I love the lede in this piece by Maggie Koerth-Baker on the cool pitch-drop experiments. The 4th graf is brilliant.
How close are video games to simulating human reactions to things like pandemics? By Rose Eveleth.
Growing rice vs. wheat could affect regional psychological differences. By me.
The oldest stars live in the galactic suburbs. Why? Beautiful writing from Nadia Drake.
Oh, no big deal. Just six bases. Instead of four. In a living bacterium. Dum de dum.
The oceans of Jupiter’s ice worlds might be swimming with life — so why do we keep sending robots to Mars? By Lee Billings.
“Perhaps exploding whales force us to confront something profound about ourselves.” By Andrew Thaler.
Smallpox may be vanquished but it might not be gone forever. Fascinating feature from Sara Reardon.
In an accident, should your self-driving car veer right to kill you or left to kill 2 strangers? Fascinating ethical debate.
Within 12 hours of going online, Nadia Drake’s post on exoplanets had to be updated because another exoplanet was discovered.
On warning signs that will work 10,000 years from now
A beautiful, thoughtful essay about our fascination with animals, by David P. Barash.
Great piece by Ethan Siegel on the true nature of scientific arrogance, and the casual dismissal of other ways of understanding the world.
Science Studio, a collection of the best audio and video about science, has relaunched.
Check out Adam Rutherford’s radio series on the genetics of intelligence
Science/news/writing
Erik Vance tries to settle an earthquake-based dispute with his wife by asking his father-in-law–a quake expert
“I was a Bad Mother within 48 hours.” Tania Browne on the bitter reality of postnatal depression.
How people began measuring the blueness of the sky
Scientists, did your paper get rejected? Just call the Times; you could get a front-page splash. And here’s the full referee comment for the rejected climate paper that the Times has inexplicably splashed with.
Ugh. A lesson on how neurobollocks could creep into education
Saving an ancient fish… by catching it, filleting it, and selling its eggs.
NIH tells scientists to start including females in tests.
“An aquatic reptile whose body was encased in a tube of bone”
Fem kills Masculinizer: on sex in silkworms.
“A fisherman idly dangling a line off a dock may not appear to be an agent of ecological collapse, but…”
A forest of continuously disrupted sleep and porous dreams.
“Someone has to do artistic justice to the evolutionary tree of life,” says Carl Zimmer. Dan Graur suggests an elegant alternative.
How to Learn to Love Your Doppleganger – Hallucinating yourself can be both a symptom and a tool.
Out damn spot! Jupiter’s Great Red Spot is shrinking.
3D-printed shark skin could make better swimsuits & racing cars
Dietary supplement extends life in worms
John Timmer on the new phone/cancer study
Coyne on Nicholas Wade’s new book: “an irresponsible book that makes unsupportable claims”
“You don’t love science, you’re looking at its butt as it walks by.”
The scariest inhabitant of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch is not what you think
New giant ‘Samba virus‘ discovered inside amoeba of the Amazon River
Sudden huge blooms of jellyfish can now be predicted by monitoring ocean winds http://t.co/Zi3KUtYpvl
A great art project: encode Wikipedia in an apple’s DNA.
The 9 Most Influential Works of Scientific Racism, Ranked
Why Fly? Flightless Bird Evolution Mystery Solved
Meet the slowest planet in the known universe, where one orbit takes 80,000 years.
Cleaning an Egyptian obelisk with lasers.
No, brain stimulation won’t give you lucid dreams
More Dead Bees, More Sloppy Science.
Superb headline. Puny humans meet to decide fate of killer robots
In the throes of book research, I sympathise with this story about a robot that dived too deeply and died.
Key West Antarctic glaciers retreating unstoppably
Maria Konnikova on ‘supertaskers’ who can multi-task without performance loss
Winning the war against birds. This robot arm can catch flying objects
Newly formed cells in the hippocampus could “dislodge previously learned information”
Polar bears quickly evolved to cope with an absurdly fatty diet. I’m taking notes.
Some fish species appear to have (somewhat) specialized in feeding on dolphin poo and vomit
Michael Lewis on how to explain complicated stuff in narratives: Find a protagonist who’s learning it, too.
Fishermen hook 12-ft hammerhead, see it’s pregnant, deliver 20 babies one by one
What connectomes can tell us about how brains (and eyes) work.
Radars of the lost shark: The battle to save the riches of Costa Rica’s Cocos Island
How to make your test sound great: invent your own statistic. For extra douche-points, use it in a test for suicide risk.
Study based on Goodall’s notes: Only known chimp war reveals how societies splinter
Last yr, the AMA labelled obesity as a “disease”. Melanie Tannenbaum explores the psychological implications of that
Birds changing in response to “unnatural selection” of radiation at Chernobyl.
“Phineas Gage is reborn every generation as a different man: Each generation reinterprets [him] anew.”
The STAP stem-cell case is snowballing to absurd proportions.
How birds survived the dinosaur apocalypse by downsizing.
Jack Bauer has killed almost 2 times as many people as all sharks in the last 450 yrs in the whole world.
Polio, almost beaten, declared an international emergency
Fresh misconduct case in social psych. Same stats-based whistleblowing that brought down Smeesters & Sanna.
Lonely bacteria mutate faster
Fascinating look at induced hibernation in animals–including mice and, maybe, humans.
Things you can’t unsee (and what that says about your brain)
“Light echoes act as astronomical time machines or portals to the past
When laughter is a symptom. Three fascinating case studies
“Nonhuman animals can lose their minds.” Laurel Braitman’s upcoming book—ANIMAL MADNESS—looks fascinating.
A study about sexual similarity gets framed as a major new finding of sex difference.
The top ten global warming ‘skeptic’ arguments answered
Rare footage of elusive jungle cat attacking a pangolin
Preliminary study (n=24) suggests that people could maybe learn to suppress own immune responses.
Darwin’s finches fumigate themselves with pesticide-infused cotton balls.
Young blood reverses ageing in mouse study. Yay! *cough*butmightcausecancer*cough*
A Desert Spider With Astonishing Moves
“Case studies are hypotheses in the making”: Emily Willingham’s powerful essay on autism science
Heh/wow/huh
Blindfolded. Upside down. Hanging from helicopter. Rhinos.
A photo of Uranus, taken from Saturn. I’m so impressed I’m not even sniggering.
Well that’s delightfully horrifying: The Mouth Of A Blood Worm
“Can you explain it like I’m five?”
Sherlock is actually terrible at deduction.
Forever screaming now: ‘Alien catfish‘ has got some teeth.
The match you’ve always wanted: Safety Carl Zimmer vs Gamera
British slang, as (ineffectively) defined by an American.
Do you want to be a panda caretaker?
Sad photographer shoots her own tears under a microscope.
Octopus opens jar from the inside. And then just stays there. Because screw you, humans.
WHAT? Sea anemone eats baby seabird.
An 800-page Pantone book from 1692
Internet/journalism/society
The NYT’s digital strategy doc is really interesting. Frank, introspective, insightful. Although, maybe invest in a good scanner?
Jill Abramson, the editor-in-chief of the NYT was unexpectedly fired. Here are some of the best takes on the affair, by Ken Auletta, Emily Bell and Ann Friedman: “In real time, it’s hard to be sure what’s sexism and what’s you.”
“To truly shift social norms, the community has to get involved in enforcing them.” Laura Hudson on banding together to curb online abuse.
UK Sci Media Centre lambasted for pushing corporate science. Maybe also lambast the lazy journos who parrot their quotes?
Oxford Dictionaries delivers with these 18 ways to say “awesome”
“Mostly, though, it’s made me more afraid.” Dispatches from fact-checking
Patreon: The Crowdfunding Upstart That’s Turning Freelancers Into Superstars
Meet the woman who coined the term “white privilege” in 1988. She’s wonderful, sharp, compassionate.
Crediibility of UK journalism being crushed to death by killer snakes.
“For that vast continent, in all its diversity, you get that one f**king tree.”
A superb NYTimes article on writing: “I stopped shouting and bluffing, and slowly my writing improved.”
Ben Lillie’s Inside/Out interview on science & storytelling is funny and insightful.
Go Further
Animals
- Octopuses have a lot of secrets. Can you guess 8 of them?
- Animals
- Feature
Octopuses have a lot of secrets. Can you guess 8 of them? - This biologist and her rescue dog help protect bears in the AndesThis biologist and her rescue dog help protect bears in the Andes
- An octopus invited this writer into her tank—and her secret worldAn octopus invited this writer into her tank—and her secret world
- Peace-loving bonobos are more aggressive than we thoughtPeace-loving bonobos are more aggressive than we thought
Environment
- This ancient society tried to stop El Niño—with child sacrificeThis ancient society tried to stop El Niño—with child sacrifice
- U.S. plans to clean its drinking water. What does that mean?U.S. plans to clean its drinking water. What does that mean?
- Food systems: supporting the triangle of food security, Video Story
- Paid Content
Food systems: supporting the triangle of food security - Will we ever solve the mystery of the Mima mounds?Will we ever solve the mystery of the Mima mounds?
- Are synthetic diamonds really better for the planet?Are synthetic diamonds really better for the planet?
- This year's cherry blossom peak bloom was a warning signThis year's cherry blossom peak bloom was a warning sign
History & Culture
- Strange clues in a Maya temple reveal a fiery political dramaStrange clues in a Maya temple reveal a fiery political drama
- How technology is revealing secrets in these ancient scrollsHow technology is revealing secrets in these ancient scrolls
- Pilgrimages aren’t just spiritual anymore. They’re a workout.Pilgrimages aren’t just spiritual anymore. They’re a workout.
- This ancient society tried to stop El Niño—with child sacrificeThis ancient society tried to stop El Niño—with child sacrifice
- This ancient cure was just revived in a lab. Does it work?This ancient cure was just revived in a lab. Does it work?
- See how ancient Indigenous artists left their markSee how ancient Indigenous artists left their mark
Science
- Do you have an inner monologue? Here’s what it reveals about you.Do you have an inner monologue? Here’s what it reveals about you.
- Jupiter’s volcanic moon Io has been erupting for billions of yearsJupiter’s volcanic moon Io has been erupting for billions of years
- This 80-foot-long sea monster was the killer whale of its timeThis 80-foot-long sea monster was the killer whale of its time
- Every 80 years, this star appears in the sky—and it’s almost timeEvery 80 years, this star appears in the sky—and it’s almost time
- How do you create your own ‘Blue Zone’? Here are 6 tipsHow do you create your own ‘Blue Zone’? Here are 6 tips
Travel
- This town is the Alps' first European Capital of CultureThis town is the Alps' first European Capital of Culture
- This royal city lies in the shadow of Kuala LumpurThis royal city lies in the shadow of Kuala Lumpur
- This author tells the story of crypto-trading Mongolian nomadsThis author tells the story of crypto-trading Mongolian nomads
- Slow-roasted meats and fluffy dumplings in the Czech capitalSlow-roasted meats and fluffy dumplings in the Czech capital