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Keyword: humans

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  • Sex Makes the Brain Grow

    08/03/2010 6:43:22 PM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 41 replies · 255+ views
    Asylum for All Mankind ^ | July 30, 2010 | Jeremy Taylor
    Our happy hour fact to amaze your drinking buddies with. In an experiment involving lab rats, sex was correlated with adult brain growth. Since previous studies have shown that stressful, unpleasant situations can hinder brain growth, researchers from Princeton University wanted to see if stressful but pleasurable situations -- like sex -- would achieve the opposite effect. So, they divided male lab rats into three groups: The rats in one group were given sex partners daily, the second group got set up with female companionship once every two weeks and the third group got nothing at all. The rats that...
  • FDA OKs First Embryonic Stem Cell Research Trial on Humans, Despite Concerns

    07/30/2010 10:21:44 AM PDT · by julieee · 11 replies · 1+ views
    LifeNews.com ^ | July 30, 2010 | Steven Ertelt
    FDA OKs First Embryonic Stem Cell Research Trial on Humans, Despite Concerns Washington, DC -- The Obama administration has approved the bid by cloning company Geron to undertake the first trial involving the use of embryonic stem cells in humans. They have never been used before in people because the cells cause tumors and have immune system rejection issues when tried in animals. http://LifeNews.com/bio3137.html
  • Video of Woman Getting Attacked by Pack of Wild Dogs, Then Saved by Man

    07/08/2010 3:55:31 PM PDT · by OneVike · 11 replies · 1+ views
    This video is from Russia, but I cannot say what city it is in. What you will see is a pack of wild dogs going after a women. Worry not though, because just when it seems there will be no hope for her, a man comes out with a shovel to save her from the dogs. Follow the link below to see the incredible video of a Woman Getting Attacked by Pack of Wild Dogs, Then Saved by Man
  • Backing off on environmental perfection

    05/20/2010 2:22:30 PM PDT · by afraidfortherepublic · 3 replies · 256+ views
    The Manteca Bulletin ^ | 5-20-10 | Dennis Wyatt
    It will go down as a landmark decision. U.S. District Judge OIiver W. Wagner ruled this week that people have rights. That may sound a bit daffy but in the wacky world of California water politics people take second class citizen status behind fish and even vegetation. In a nutshell, Wagner ruled that federal water officials must consider humans along with fish when it comes to divvying up how California’s most precious resource – water – is discharged or moved through the Delta. The judge also directed the federal government to stop using what he termed “guestimations” instead of precise...
  • Missing link between man and apes found (New skeleton found)

    04/04/2010 1:26:05 PM PDT · by jerry557 · 57 replies · 1,562+ views
    Telegraph.co.uk ^ | 04/03/10 | Richard Gray
    The new species of hominid, the evolutionary branch of primates that includes humans, is to be revealed when the two-million-year-old skeleton of a child is unveiled this week. Scientists believe the almost-complete fossilised skeleton belonged to a previously-unknown type of early human ancestor that may have been a intermediate stage as ape-men evolved into the first species of advanced humans, Homo habilis. Experts who have seen the skeleton say it shares characteristics with Homo habilis, whose emergence 2.5 million years ago is seen as a key stage in the evolution of our species. The new discovery could help to rewrite...
  • Humans must be to blame for climate change, say scientists (No other way around it)

    03/06/2010 7:46:23 AM PST · by Libloather · 19 replies · 644+ views
    3/05/10
    Link only - Humans must be to blame for climate change, say scientists
  • Ancient Greenland gene map has a surprise

    02/11/2010 8:24:26 AM PST · by FredJake · 37 replies · 1,333+ views
    Yahoo News ^ | 2/11/10 | y Maggie Fox,
    WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Scientists have sequenced the DNA from four frozen hairs of a Greenlander who died 4,000 years ago in a study they say takes genetic technology into several new realms. Surprisingly, the long-dead man appears to have originated in Siberia and is unrelated to modern Greenlanders, Morten Rasmussen of the University of Copenhagen and colleagues found. "This provides evidence for a migration from Siberia into the New World some 5,500 years ago, independent of that giving rise to the modern Native Americans and Inuit," the researchers wrote in Thursday's issue of the journal Nature. Not only can...
  • H1N1 influenza adopted novel strategy to move from birds to humans

    12/08/2009 12:58:42 PM PST · by decimon · 32 replies · 826+ views
    Bird influenza viruses have a variety of strategies to cross the species barrier and spreadThe 2009 H1N1 influenza virus used a new strategy to cross from birds into humans, a warning that it has more than one trick up its sleeve to jump the species barrier and become virulent. In a report in this week's early online edition of the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, University of California, Berkeley, researchers show that the H1N1, or swine flu, virus adopted a new mutation in one of its genes distinct from the mutations found in previous flu viruses, including...
  • Did Neanderthals Have Sex with Modern Humans?

    11/13/2009 5:05:13 PM PST · by HarleyD · 53 replies · 1,929+ views
    Fox News ^ | November 06, 2009 | Charles Q. Choi
    We are currently the only human species alive, but as recently as 24,000 years ago another one walked the earth — the Neanderthals. These extinct humans were the closest relatives we had, and tantalizing new hints from researchers suggest that we might have been intimately close indeed. The mystery of whether Neanderthals and us had sex might be solved if the entire Neanderthal genome is reported soon as expected. The matter of why they died and we succeeded, however, remains an open question. Maybe not nasty and brutish, but still short Why did Neanderthals go extinct? Roughly 30,000 years ago,...
  • Top 10 Things that Make Humans Special

    11/11/2009 7:11:15 AM PST · by wildbill · 17 replies · 899+ views
    Live Science ^ | Nov. 2009 | Charles Choi
    Humans are unusual animals by any stretch of the imagination, ones that have changed the face of the world around us. What makes us so special when compared to the rest of the animal kingdom? Some things we take completely for granted might surprise you. -
  • 'Proof' humans cause global warming

    10/26/2009 1:08:59 PM PDT · by NormsRevenge · 59 replies · 2,412+ views
    Courier Mail ^ | 10/20/09 | From correspondents in Washington
    SEDIMENT cores from a small Arctic lake in Canada stretching back 200,000 years show unprecedented gains in global warming since 1950, indicating human activity is the likely cause. "The past few decades have been unique in the past 200,000 years in terms of the changes we see in the biology and chemistry recorded in the cores,'' University of Colorado glaciologist Yarrow Axford said. "We see clear evidence for warming in one of the most remote places on Earth at a time when the Arctic should be cooling because of natural processes." Mr Axford is the chief author of the study...
  • Rapid-Test Sensitivity for Novel Swine-Origin Influenza A (H1N1) Virus in Humans

    10/13/2009 7:24:33 PM PDT · by neverdem · 4 replies · 461+ views
    New England Journal of Medicine ^ | August 13, 2009 | Faix et al.
    To the Editor: The Naval Health Research Center serves as the Navy hub for the Department of Defense's Global Emerging Infections Surveillance and Response System (GEIS), in which it monitors influenza-like illness among recruit trainees of all military services, military dependents, and crew members of large Navy ships (population, >1000). The center works in collaboration with the Border Infectious Disease Surveillance Project of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), which monitors populations located on the border between California and Mexico. The first two human cases of novel swine-origin influenza A (H1N1) virus (S-OIV), known as swine flu, in...
  • Nanoparticles could pose threat to humans: scientists

    09/16/2009 12:44:37 PM PDT · by NormsRevenge · 9 replies · 804+ views
    AFP on Yahoo ^ | 9/16/09 | AFP
    VIENNA (AFP) – They can make fabric resistant to stains, improve the taste of food and help drug research, but nanoparticles could also pose a danger to human health, experts warned Wednesday. Susanne Stark, of the Consumer Information Association, told a seminar in the Austrian city of Salzburg that companies should be forced to indicate on labels whether a product contains the tiny particles. "There are more questions than answers on the effects of nanoparticles" on human health, the chemist said. Cosmetic and food products should indicate whether their products contain nanoparticles by 2012, she said. Nanoparticles, measuring no more...
  • Is the human brain still evolving?

    07/28/2009 11:14:56 PM PDT · by ErnstStavroBlofeld · 34 replies · 721+ views
    How Stuff Works ^ | unknown | Molly Edmonds
    When we daydream about the future, we tend to focus on the fabulous belongings we're going to have. Jet packs, flying cars, weapons to kill aliens, cell phones that make today's sleek models look clunky -- you name it, we're going to have it. We don't tend to focus, however, on who we'll be in the future. Most of us probably picture ourselves exactly the same, though maybe thinner, as surely we'll all have robot personal trainers by then. While we see the world's technology evolving to meet our needs, we may not think about how we ourselves might be...
  • Cats 'exploit' humans by purring

    07/16/2009 1:54:51 PM PDT · by dragonblustar · 64 replies · 1,259+ views
    BBC News ^ | July 13, 2009 | Victoria Gill
    Cat owners may have suspected as much, but it seems our feline friends have found a way to manipulate us humans. Researchers at the University of Sussex have discovered that cats use a "soliciting purr" to overpower their owners and garner attention and food. Unlike regular purring, this sound incorporates a "cry", with a similar frequency to a human baby's. The team said cats have "tapped into" a human bias - producing a sound that humans find very difficult to ignore.
  • Cats Do Control Humans, Study Finds

    07/13/2009 2:07:09 PM PDT · by Red in Blue PA · 58 replies · 1,636+ views
    Yahoo ^ | 7/13/2009 | Staff
    If you've ever wondered who's in control, you or your cat, a new study points to the obvious. It's your cat. Household cats exercise this control with a certain type of urgent-sounding, high-pitched meow, according to the findings. This meow is actually a purr mixed with a high-pitched cry. While people usually think of cat purring as a sign of happiness, some cats make this purr-cry sound when they want to be fed. The study showed that humans find these mixed calls annoying and difficult to ignore. "The embedding of a cry within a call that we normally associate with...
  • How Neanderthals met a grisly fate: devoured by humans

    05/17/2009 3:55:56 AM PDT · by LibWhacker · 65 replies · 2,058+ views
    Guardian ^ | 5/17/09 | Robin McKie
    A fossil discovery bears marks of butchering similar to those made when cutting up a deerOne of science's most puzzling mysteries - the disappearance of the Neanderthals - may have been solved. Modern humans ate them, says a leading fossil expert. The controversial suggestion follows publication of a study in the Journal of Anthropological Sciences about a Neanderthal jawbone apparently butchered by modern humans. Now the leader of the research team says he believes the flesh had been eaten by humans, while its teeth may have been used to make a necklace.
  • Modern life's pressures may be hastening human evolution (Human Evolution Speeding Up)

    04/08/2009 6:19:32 PM PDT · by GOPGuide · 51 replies · 1,427+ views
    McClatchy ^ | April 8, 2009 | Robert S. Boyd
    snip It's even conceivable, he said, that our genes eventually will change enough to create an entirely new human species, one no longer able to breed with our own species, Homo sapiens. "Someday in the far distant future, enough genetic changes might have occurred so that future populations could not interbreed with the current one,'' Sussman said in an e-mail message. snip It's also the topic of a new book, "The 10,000 Year Explosion,'' by anthropologists Henry Harpending and Gregory Cochran of the University of Utah, Salt Lake City. "For most of the last century, the received wisdom in the...
  • Skippy surprises scientists

    01/19/2009 1:04:36 PM PST · by GodGunsGuts · 46 replies · 906+ views
    CMI ^ | Carl Wieland
    Skippy surprises scientists by Carl Wieland 20 January 2009 Feeling jumpy? It may not be from what you think. Researchers at Australia’s government-backed Centre of Excellence for Kangaroo Genomics have mapped the genetic code of these marsupials, and were surprised at the amazing similarity to that of humans...
  • Women Prefer Prestige Over Dominance in Mates

    12/18/2008 12:33:02 AM PST · by 2ndDivisionVet · 51 replies · 1,584+ views
    Personal Relationships ^ | December 17, 2008 | Amy Molnar
    Los Angeles, CA – A new study in the journal Personal Relationships reveals that women prefer mates who are recognized by their peers for their skills, abilities, and achievements, while not preferring men who use coercive tactics to subordinate their rivals. Indeed, women found dominance strategies of the latter type to be attractive primarily when men used them in the context of male-male athletic competitions. Jeffrey K. Snyder, Lee A. Kirkpatrick, and H. Clark Barrett conducted three studies with college women at two U.S. universities. Participants evaluated hypothetical potential mates described in written vignettes. The studies were designed to examine...