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Groundhog Day: How Often Does Punxsutawney Phil Get It Right? The many groundhogs that have been designated as Phil over the years have predicted 99 forecasts of more winter and 15 early springs, according to the Punxsutawney Groundhog Club, of Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania, which takes care of the animals. A number of other parts of the country have their own weather-forecasting rodents. Read More »Running Too Hard? Light Jogging Linked with Living Longer "Light joggers" were defined as those who ran at a speed of about 5 mph (8 km/h) a few times a week, for less than 2.5 hours per week total. The finding "suggests there may be an upper limit for exercise dosing that is optimal for health benefits," study co-author Dr. Peter Schnohr, of the Copenhagen City Heart Study and Frederiksberg Hospital in Denmark, said in a statement. Dr. Karol Watson, co-director of preventive cardiology at the University of California, Los Angeles, agreed, and said that many previous studies have produced similar findings: A moderate amount of jogging is linked with the best outcomes in terms of a longer life span, but when people run too far for too long, the health benefits start to drop off. Read More »White House Seeks $18.5 Billion NASA Budget, with Deep Space in Mind The $18.5 billion budget request, presented by Bolden today (Feb. 2), includes funding for developing a mission to Jupiter's moon Europa, and the agency's asteroid redirect mission (ARM). Officials think ARM could help pave the way for crewed missions to the Red Planet by the 2030s. "NASA is firmly on a journey to Mars," Bolden said. If the budget request proceeds as is, NASA could end the long-running Opportunity rover's mission on Mars next year. Read More »For Teens, Falling Asleep Gets Harder with More Screen Time Teenagers who while away the hours on an electronic device — whether it's a computer, cell phone, tablet or TV — tend to have more problems with sleeping at night, a new study finds. "One of the surprising aspects was the very clear dose-response associations," said the study's lead researcher Mari Hysing, a researcher and a psychologist at Uni Research Health, a research company based in Norway. Read More »Exclusive - The FAA: regulating business on the moon By Irene Klotz CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (Reuters) - The United States government has taken a new, though preliminary, step to encourage commercial development of the moon. The Federal Aviation Administration, in a previously undisclosed late-December letter to Bigelow Aerospace, said the agency intends to "leverage the FAA's existing launch licensing authority to encourage private sector investments in space systems by ensuring that commercial activities can be conducted on a non-interference basis." In other words, experts said, Bigelow could set up one of its proposed inflatable habitats on the moon, and expect to have exclusive rights to that territory - as well as related areas that might be tapped for mining, exploration and other activities. It also bans nuclear weapons in space, prohibits national claims to celestial bodies and stipulates that space exploration and development should benefit all countries. "We didn't give (Bigelow Aerospace) a license to land on the moon. Read More »NASA May Ax Long-Lived Mars Rover Opportunity Mission Next Year Read More » Hubble Space Telescope Could Survive Through 2020, Scientists Say Read More » Lava Bomb Fossils Hold Clues to Islands' Fiery Origin Read More » F-35 Fighter Jet Tested in Extreme Weather Conditions Read More » 'Missing Oil' from 2010 BP Spill Found on Gulf Seafloor Read More » All About the Bass: How Baleen Whales Hear Very Low Frequencies Read More » Prehistoric High Times: Early Humans Used Magic Mushrooms, Opium Opium, "magic" mushrooms and other psychoactive substances have been used since prehistoric times all over the world, according to a new review of archaeological findings. The evidence shows that people have been consuming psychoactive substances for centuries, or even millennia, in many regions of the world, said Elisa Guerra-Doce, an associate professor of prehistory at the University of Valladolid in Spain, who wrote the review. Guerra-Doce's previous research showed the use of psychoactive substances in prehistoric Eurasia. For example, the evidence shows that people have been chewing the leaves of a plant called the betel since at least 2660 B.C., according to Guerra-Doce's report. Read More »Cheap Holograms Could Give Rise to Glasses-Free 3D TVs Read More » Hillary Clinton on vaccines: 'The science is clear' WASHINGTON (AP) — Hillary Rodham Clinton is tweaking Republicans who say vaccinations should be optional, writing on social media that vaccines protect the lives of children. Read More »What Would It Be Like to Live on Mercury? Read More » NASA Europa Mission Gets White House Approval Read More » | ||||
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Tuesday, February 3, 2015
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
FeedaMail: TRENDS IN NEUROSCIENCES
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Taxon matters: promoting integrative studies of social behavior Understanding the astonishing diversity of social behavior displayed by animals – including humans – is a central goal of biological research [1,2]. Such diversity has been studied from multiple, often non-overlapping perspectives. For example, behavioral ecologists and evolutionary biologists have long sought to understand the ultimate (functional) explanations for social interactions. By contrast, psychologists, endocrinologists, and neurobiologists have typically focused on the proximate (mechanistic) bases for these behaviors. Read More » | ||||
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