When Things Feel Unreal, Is That a Delusion or an Insight?

Trouble viewing? View in your browser.
View all Scientific American publications.
    
June 14, 2022

Mental Health

When Things Feel Unreal, Is That a Delusion or an Insight?

The psychiatric syndrome called derealization raises profound moral and philosophical questions

By John Horgan

Robotics

Tiny, Tumbling Origami Robots Could Help with Targeted Drug Delivery

The design's origami pattern creates the flexibility needed to deliver compounds to specific areas of the body

By Fionna M. D. Samuels

Cancer

We Must End Ageism in Cancer Clinical Trials

Older patients are underrepresented in clinical trial research. Here's how we can change that

By Dany Habr

Pharmaceuticals

Common Drugs Pollute Rivers on Every Continent

A global look reveals contamination by antibiotics, antidepressants and other medications

By Andrea Thompson

Conservation

Poem: 'Vaulted Seeds,' after the Svalbard Global Seed Vault

Science in meter and verse

By Brittney Corrigan

Renewable Energy

Engineers Look to River and Ocean Currents for Clean Energy

The Department of Energy is helping to fund 11 projects that are designed to harness the power of moving water

By John Fialka,E&E News

Genetics

How Parachute Frogs Took to the Sky

Broad-webbed feet help them glide through rain-forest canopies

By Jack Tamisiea

Animals

Wiggling Whiskers Help Hungry Seals Hunt in the Dark

A new seal's-eye view shows these specialized hairs in motion at sea

By Sasha Warren

Health Care

Universal Health Care Could Have Saved More Than 330,000 U.S. Lives during COVID

The numbers of lives lost and dollars spent would have been significantly lower if coverage had been extended to everyone, a new study says

By Rachel Nuwer

Vaccines

COVID Death Rates Explained, Dismal Booster Stats and New Vaccines

On this episode of the COVID, Quickly podcast, we clear up some data misconceptions, get to the bottom of the booster uptake issue and talk Novavax.

By Josh Fischman,Tanya Lewis,Jeffery DelViscio,Tulika Bose | 07:50

Health Care

Utah Kept Them from Learning about Consent, So These Teens Found a Place to Have 'the Talk' Together

A group of teenagers in rural Utah are training to become sex educators so that they can teach their peers what they do not learn in the classroom

By Jesse Ryan

Evolution

Heated Debate Persists over the Origins of Complex Cells

Were mitochondria a driving evolutionary force or just a late addition?

By Viviane Callier,Knowable Magazine
FROM THE STORE

Truth vs Lies

How do we navigate the post-truth era, when there is no longer an expectation that politicians or pundits will be honest? In this eBook, we break down the science of deception so that we can protect ourselves against it. We look at human perception and how those perceptions are influenced using technology as well as provide interventions for combating bias and antiscience thinking.

*Editor's Note: This Collector's Edition was published as Truth vs Lies. The eBook adaptation contains all of the articles, but some of the artwork has been removed to optimize viewing on tablet devices.

Buy Now
LATEST ISSUES

Questions?   Comments?

Send Us Your Feedback
Download the Scientific American App
Download on the App Store
Download on Google Play

To view this email as a web page, go here.

You received this email because you opted-in to receive email from Scientific American.

To ensure delivery please add news@email.scientificamerican.com to your address book.

Unsubscribe     Manage Email Preferences     Privacy Policy     Contact Us

Comments

Popular Posts