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Dophins Can Recognize Their Friends by Tasting Their Urine
Dolphins are well known for their acoustic sense, being able to communicate over several kilometres underwater. Now researchers have found that they also have a unique sense of taste that allows them to identify family and friends without seeing or hearing them.
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Ruminating About Ruminating Can Reinforce Depression
A lot of young people have depressive symptoms. Ruminative thinking, and even thinking about how much you ruminate, reinforces the symptoms. But there is hope.
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Psychopaths Become More Antisocial With Age
Anyone waiting for a sociopath to grow up or calm down should give up; they will not change, a new study has revealed.
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How Magnetic Stimulation Affects the Brain
Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation has been used as an effective treatment for treatment-resistant depression, and now researchers are beginning to understand how it works.
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Diet-Free Weight-Loss Intervention Targets Instinctive Hunger Cues
People who are highly responsive to food lost more weight and, importantly, were more successful at keeping the pounds off using a new alternative weight-loss intervention that targets improving a person’s response to internal hunger cues and their ability to resist food.
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New Insights Into the Genetic Origin of Our Senses
A gene responsible for the evolution of neural structures used for sensing the environment has been identified.
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Immune Cells May Play Role in Most Common Form of Blindness
Scientists at The University of Manchester have taken an important step towards finding a treatment for age-related macular degeneration (AMD), the most common form of adult blindness in the developed world.
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Toxic Muskulinity: Muskox Are Injuring Their Brains During Ritual Headbutts
Scientists at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai saw for the first time hallmarks of concussions and other head trauma in the brains of deceased headbutting animals—muskoxen and bighorn sheep.
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Previously Unknown Function Identified for the Fragile X Protein
A new role for the fragile X protein has been identified in a new study that shows the protein can regulate a receptor in the memory center of the brain, influencing learning.
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Can We Remember Moments Where Our Ego Dissolves?
People who practice intensive meditation report memories of states in which their sense of self dissolves. Is this at all possible?
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