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Shocking photo shows what happens when you flush with the lid up
Every time you flush a toilet, it releases plumes of tiny water droplets into the air around you. We used lasers to show how, writes John Crimaldi.
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From mummies to mosques—new Google Arts & Culture initiative brings Egypt’s archaeological treasures to the masses
New online platform aims to turn traditionally scholarly subject into something "easily digestible and fun to explore"
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One Chart Shows The Best And Worst Face Mask Types, Based on The Latest Research
A simple trick can reveal whether your face mask offers sufficient protection: Try blowing out a candle while wearing it. A good mask should prevent you from extinguishing the flame.
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3 Color Psychology Tips for Website Design and Branding
Utilizing elements of color psychology in website design can affect your visitors mood, opinions, and even actions and decisions. Learn more...
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Over 24,000 coronavirus research papers are now available in one place
The data set aims to accelerate scientific research that could fight the Covid-19 pandemic.
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"What Doesn't Kill Us Makes Us Stronger" - MentalWealth
The above quote is from a German philosopher named Friedrich Neitzsche. Positive psychology came about in 1998 because of Martin Seligman's address
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0 +1
Best Data Science Online Course with 100% Practical Experience
Interact with machine learning algorithms in data science course of OnlineITGuru. learn artificial Intelligence and get data science certification
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SharedIt | For Researchers | Springer Nature
We think this initiative strikes the right balance, given researchers’ legitimate needs to share content as part of their collaborations and discussions and the increasing need of wider society to appreciate the results of recent research.
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Memories form 'barrier' to letting go of objects for people who hoard
Researchers hope that the findings could help develop new ways to train people with hoarding difficulties to discard clutter.
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More Than Half of Americans Reportedly Think We 'Shouldn't Teach' Arabic Numerals
If a recent poll conducted by the US market research company CivicScience is to be taken at face value, roughly one out of every two Americans doesn't think Arabic numerals should be taught as part of the curriculum in US schools.
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Can this food additive turn our gut bacteria against us?
The research — the results of which appear in Frontiers in Nutrition — explains how E171 can alter the activity of gut bacteria in potentially dangerous ways.
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Mapping the second brain: The latest science on the effect of your gut bacteria and how to boost them
Greater diversity of gut bacteria has been associated with better gut health, although the mechanisms are still not well understood. Less diversity has been linked to conditions including irritable bowel, diabetes and obesity.
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The Science of Addictive Food
How the food industry manipulates ingredients to keep us buying more and eating so much we blow up like balloons.
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Essential Oils Promise Help, But Beware the Risks
Haluka is among a growing number of people turning up with chemical burns, allergic reactions, respiratory issues, and other side effects from the popular fragrant plant extracts. In the past year alone
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Crohn’s Disease: Research Roundup - Meridien Research
Crohn’s disease, which may affect as many as 780,000 Americans, is a type of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). The condition is defined by chronic inflammation of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract, most commonly the end of the small bowel (the ileum) and the beginning of the colon, but it may affect any part of the GI tract. It differs… Read More…
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Massive Science
Massive is making scientific knowledge more accessible and actionable for everyone.
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Teaching scientists how to share code
Would it surprise you to learn that most of the world's scholarly research is not owned by the people who funded it or who created it? Rather it's owned by private corporations and locked up in proprietary systems, leading to problems around sharing, reuse, and reproducibility.
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You Shot a Rubber Band off Your Thumb. Why Didn’t Your Thumb Get Hit?
If you shoot a rubber band off your thumb, why doesn't it hit your thumb? The answer, it turns out, involves some pretty serious physics.
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Scientific publishing is a rip-off. We fund the research – it should be free
Those who take on the global industry that traps research behind paywalls are heroes, not thieves, says George Monbiot
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Science in film: from the meaning of time to the marvels of fungi
What does time really mean? What if you could play with time? And what if we lived in a world without fungi? Some of the questions posed by filmmakers exploring the world of science.
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