A look at what the President achieved during his first term in the areas of health, space science, energy, environment, and science education
A look at what the President achieved during his first term in the areas of health, space science, energy, environment, and science education
Disrupting a small part of the brain with a magnetic field can reduce people’s prejudice towards good news.
A former head of the Environmental Protection Agency, and one of the early forces behind the Clean Air Act, dies at 92.
Mice raised in isolation from their mothers developed cognitive deficits similar to those of babies raised in orphanages where physical contact is infrequent.
Researchers use characteristic differences in eye movements to identify patients with deficits in neurological function.
Canines that chase away seagulls have been helping to reduce the amount of bird droppings, which can carry disease and lead to beach closures.
September 1, 2012
Meet some of the people featured in the September 2012 issue of The Scientist.
Wired for Story, Dreamland, Homo Mysterious, and Vagina
The brain’s phagocytes follow an ATP bread trail laid down by calcium waves to the site of damage.
The remarkable ability of the star-nosed mole to interpret its surroundings through touch is yielding clues about mammalian sensory processing in general.