Discoveries about Ancient Human Evolution Win 2022 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine

Sponsored by Fondazione Prada
Trouble viewing? View in your browser.
View all Scientific American publications.
    
October 03, 2022

Anthropology

Discoveries about Ancient Human Evolution Win 2022 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine

Svante Pääbo's work on sequencing the DNA of Neandertals and Denisovans, which won the 2022 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, revealed surprising interbreeding among human species

By Tanya Lewis

Psychology

How People Rate Pizza, Jobs and Relationships Is Surprisingly Predictive of Their Behavior

Researchers are perplexed as to why inner feelings about life and love predict our actions better than the best social science

By Sara Novak

Cancer

Fungi Lurk Inside Cancers--and Might Speed Their Growth

Thousands of tumor samples provide the clearest link yet between cancer and fungi, but more research is needed

By Max Kozlov,Nature magazine

Food

How to Brew the Perfect Cup of Coffee, According to Science

A mathematical model reveals the best way to achieve consistently tasty espresso

By Jamie Foster,Christopher H. Hendon,The Conversation US

Politics

On Election Day, Vote for Candidates with Science-Based Policies, Not Politicians Who Ignore Evidence

Some office seekers have positions based on research and facts, whereas others stand on assumptions and bias

By The Editors

Pollution

The Sky Needs Its 'Silent Spring' Moment

A surge of new research underscores the growing global problem of light pollution—as well as the urgent need for public awareness and action

By Joshua Sokol

Particle Physics

See the Facility That Tests whether Nuclear Weapons Work

Gargantuan lasers induce a fusion reaction to test the U.S. nuclear stockpile

By Adam Mann,Alastair Philip Wiper

Statistics

Statistics Are Being Abused, but Mathematicians Are Fighting Back

An expert explains how numbers can mislead and what she's doing to help people understand them better

By Manon Bischoff

Neurology

Alzheimer's Drug Slows Mental Decline in Trial--But Is It a Breakthrough?

Researchers are cautiously optimistic following companies' announcement of positive results for lecanemab

By McKenzie Prillaman,Nature magazine

Psychology

How Much People Write Can Reveal Racial Biases

Society's stereotypes can slip into communication in subtle ways

By Ayelet Fishbach

Extraterrestrial Life

50, 100 & 150 Years Ago: October 2022

No life on the moon; safe gas at home

By Mark Fischetti
FROM THE STORE
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