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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
34 w

Political pros no better than public in predicting which messages persuade, researchers find
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phys.org

Political pros no better than public in predicting which messages persuade, researchers find

Political campaigns spend big bucks hiring consultants to craft persuasive messaging, but a new study coauthored by Yale political scientist Joshua L. Kalla demonstrates that political professionals perform no better than laypeople in predicting which messages will sway voters.
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
34 w

The reasons flowers wilt could explain how plants spend (and save) their energy
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phys.org

The reasons flowers wilt could explain how plants spend (and save) their energy

Wilting flowers might not signal poor flower or plant health, but rather the effects of a sophisticated resource management strategy in plants, millions of years in the making.
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
34 w

Saturday Citations: On chimpanzee playwrights; the nature of dark energy; deep-diving Antarctic seals
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phys.org

Saturday Citations: On chimpanzee playwrights; the nature of dark energy; deep-diving Antarctic seals

This week, researchers reported the world's second-tiniest toad, winning the silver in the Brachycephalus contest. Chemists at UCLA disproved a 100-year-old organic chemistry rule. And researchers in Kenya report that elephants don't like bees, which could be a conservation boon (for the elephants. And maybe also the bees?). Additionally, scientists addressed an old thought experiment about monkeys and the theater, physicists correlated dark energy with the black hole population in the universe, and a group of Antarctic seals were found to be highly strategic and also adorable:
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
34 w

African Sahara 'greening' can alter Northern Hemisphere climate, modeling study finds
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African Sahara 'greening' can alter Northern Hemisphere climate, modeling study finds

Africa's Sahara Desert may be considered a vast expanse of barren sand with limited vegetation, an extreme environment for plants and animals to thrive, but life always finds a way. Indeed, vegetation growth in the desert has waxed and waned over millennia, with periods of enhanced growth termed "greening."
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
34 w

New digital light manufacturing approach resolves common problems associated with 3D printing
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phys.org

New digital light manufacturing approach resolves common problems associated with 3D printing

A team of materials scientists, medical researchers and engineers affiliated with a large number of institutions across Australia has developed a new way to conduct digital light manufacturing that overcomes problems with current methods. In their paper published in the journal Nature, the group describes their new technique, how it works and ways it might be used.
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
34 w

Not too big, not too small: Why modern humans are the ideal size for speed
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phys.org

Not too big, not too small: Why modern humans are the ideal size for speed

The fastest animal on land is the cheetah, capable of reaching top speeds of 104 kilometers per hour. In the water, the fastest animals are yellowfin tuna and wahoo, which can reach speeds of 75 and 77 km per hour respectively. In the air, the title of the fastest level flight (excluding diving) goes to the white-throated needletail swift, at more than 112 km per hour.
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
34 w

'Doomsday' Antarctic glacier melting faster than expected, fueling calls for geoengineering
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'Doomsday' Antarctic glacier melting faster than expected, fueling calls for geoengineering

New studies about the Thwaites Glacier, also called the "Doomsday Glacier," have sparked a conversation about geoengineering as a climate change solution.
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
34 w

Something to sniff at: Lab-engineered receptors illuminate odor detection
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Something to sniff at: Lab-engineered receptors illuminate odor detection

A team of researchers led by Duke University, the University of California San Francisco, and the Beckman Research Institute of the City of Hope have engineered odorant receptors to reveal the molecular basis of odor discrimination.
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
34 w

Biochemists create protocells to explore how lipids may have led to first cell membranes
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Biochemists create protocells to explore how lipids may have led to first cell membranes

A team of biochemists at the University of California, San Diego, working with a group of biochemical engineers from the University of California, Los Angeles, has found that the development of short lipids might have led to the development of the first cell membranes on early Earth.
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
34 w

Ancient mud reveals Australia's burning history over the past 130,000 years—and a way forward in current fire crisis
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Ancient mud reveals Australia's burning history over the past 130,000 years—and a way forward in current fire crisis

Increased land management by Aboriginal people in southeastern Australia around 6,000 years ago cut forest shrub cover in half, according to our new study published in Science of fossil pollen trapped in ancient mud.
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