Science

Pages

11:11am

Thu May 3, 2012
Diversions

Look! Up in the sky! It’s Super Moon …

If the skies clear up Saturday night you could get a glimpse of the “super moon.”  Saturday’s full moon will appear the largest it has in more than a year. 

Read more

4:39pm

Wed May 2, 2012
NPR Science

'Zombie' ants and the fungus that saves them

Originally published on Wed May 2, 2012 4:59 pm

As you can probably tell, at least one person on this blog's masthead likes ants.

So we've always been bummed that we haven't had the opportunity to tell you about zombie ants, but today we are glad to report there is a new development in the field. Luckily, it's a good-news report about a fungus that limits the fungus that turns ants into zombies.

Read more
Tags: 

10:27am

Wed May 2, 2012
health politics

Even without health law, some reforms will stay, predicts former Obama official

A controversial former Obama health-care administrator was in Seattle this week, speaking to 1,000 people about what can be learned from medical mistakes--saying patient safety should be an ethical imperative .

Read more
Tags: 

11:10am

Mon April 30, 2012
immunizations

Federal campaign reaches out to Northwest's vaccine-shy parents

Originally published on Fri April 27, 2012 5:15 pm

COEUR D’ALENE, Idaho - The federal government’s top health officers are making an appeal to the Northwest’s medical community to boost vaccination rates. The deputy director of the Centers for Disease Control’s immunization branch spoke at a public health conference in Coeur d’Alene Friday as part of the national campaign.

Last year, Washington and Oregon immunization rates were among the lowest in the nation. Idaho’s was average. That’s according to a CDC survey.

Read more

6:08am

Mon April 30, 2012
food safety

Lavender farmers want attention from foodies

Credit Sequim Lavender Farmers Association

The area around Sequim on Washington's Olympic peninsula is known as one of the top lavender growing regions in the nation. Most of that lavender ends up as dried flowers or scented potpourri.

Nowadays, it’s also ending up in food. The growers are meeting today (April 30th) to discuss the safest ways to make those flower buds edible, using a certification process.

Read more

11:02am

Wed April 25, 2012
space exploration

Before attacking asteroids, they'll surround Earth with telescopes

Credit The Associated Press

Whether they ever manage to get any platinum out of an asteroid, Bellevue-based Planetary Resources could become known for surrounding Earth with telescopes.  

That’s the first item in the “prospecting” stage of the space company’s effort to get precious metals from asteroids, using robotic space-craft.

Read more

9:30am

Sat April 21, 2012
NPR Science

Lights off, eyes open: New moon darkens skies for meteor shower

Originally published on Sat April 21, 2012 7:46 am

Credit Danielle Moser/MSFC / NASA

Tonight is a good night for a meteor shower. The Lyrids aren't known for their flashy shows, but this year they're getting help from a new moon.

The dark skies will be "ideal for meteor watching from the ground," NASA says.

Kelly Beatty, senior contributing editor for Sky and Telescope magazine, tells Weekend Edition host Scott Simon the best views are from the darkest places.

Read more

10:25am

Wed April 18, 2012
earthquakes

Prototype early warning system worked during Calif. quake

Originally published on Tue April 17, 2012 5:00 pm

A prototype earthquake early warning system worked as designed when an actual quake gently shook California last Friday. Researchers reported the results Tuesday at the annual meeting of American seismologists.

Last year, a private foundation in collaboration with the U.S. Geological Survey gave a multimillion dollar grant to create an automated earthquake warning system for the Pacific Coast states.

The idea is to provide advance notice to prepare people for severe shaking. It could come via a cell phone alert or a pop-up on your computer or TV screen.

Read more

8:32am

Wed April 18, 2012
NPR science

Can you think your way to that hole-in-one?

Originally published on Wed April 18, 2012 4:50 am

Psychologists at Purdue University have come up with an interesting twist on the old notion of the power of positive thinking. Call it the power of positive perception: They've shown that you may be able to improve your golf game by believing the hole you're aiming for is larger than it really is.

Jessica Witt, who studies how perception and performance are related, decided to look at golf — specifically, how the appearance of the hole changes depending on whether you're playing well or poorly.

Read more
Tags: 

9:16am

Mon April 16, 2012
Shots - Health Blog

Why women suffer more migraines than men

Originally published on Mon April 16, 2012 12:17 am

One in four women has had a migraine. And, it turns out, the debilitating headaches affect three times more women than men.

But why?

Decades ago, these headaches were attributed to women's inability to cope with stress, a sort of hysteria. Now experts are starting to figure out the factors that really make a difference.

Today scientists know a migraine is all in your head — but not in that old-fashioned sense. Migraines are biologically based, and they play themselves out as a wave of electrical activity traveling across the brain.

Read more

10:33am

Tue April 10, 2012
Virus controversy

Bird flu studies mired in export control law limbo

Originally published on Tue April 10, 2012 12:40 am

Credit PR Newswire

Scientists who created mutant forms of bird flu want to see their research published, and an influential advisory committee recently gave them the green light after a debate that lasted for months.

But one of the manuscripts is now being blocked from publication because of Dutch legal controls on the export of technology that could potentially be used for weapons.

It's just the latest example of how complicated international export control laws have affected the debate over what to do about two studies on bird flu.

Read more

12:27pm

Thu April 5, 2012
Science

Autism researchers zeroing in on a genetic cause

Credit danmachold / flickr

Scientists have been pretty sure autism must begin very early in development, possibly even at the moment a sperm meets an egg. New research, conducted partially in Seattle, supports two interesting theories:

Read more

Pages