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Every time you master a new recipe, remember a phone number, or finally figure out how to fold a fitted sheet, your brain is ...
For decades, researchers have thought of autism as a predominantly male condition. The more we studied boys and men, the ...
12h
ZME Science on MSNConservative people in the US distrust science way more broadly than previously thoughtIf you thought conservatives distrusted climate science and gender studies but were fine with physics, think again. A ...
For 100 years, quantum theory has painted the subatomic world as strange beyond words. But bold new interpretations and ...
2d
PsyPost on MSNYour brain doesn’t learn the way we thought, according to new neuroscience breakthroughEvery day, people are constantly learning and forming new memories. When you pick up a new hobby, try a recipe a friend ...
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New Scientist on MSNThe blue whale: the world's most versatile measuring stick?Feedback is delighted to hear from a reader who proposes an ingenious new unit of data – but we have some quibbles with the maths ...
We have read all sorts in the New Scientist Book Club, from Octavia E. Butler’s classic slice of dystopian fiction, Parable of the Sower, to space exploration in Adrian Tchaikovsky’s Alien Clay.
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Apophis, like the recently identified asteroid known as 2024 YR4, was once thought to be on a crash ... We'll also keep you up to date with New Scientist events and special offers.
1935 Schrödinger devises a thought experiment in which a cat in a closed box may be considered both alive and dead while it is unobserved. Einstein, Nathan Rosen and Boris Podolsky write a paper ...
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