Tag Archives: Google - Page 11

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There Are Whales Alive Today Who Were Born Before Moby Dick Was Written
Some of the bowhead whales in the icy waters off of Alaska today are over 200 years old

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Not surprising, but interesting nonetheless

I find a lot of studies lead to results that make me think "well….yeah".  But, I always find them interesting.  In this case (and quite often in other cases), it's on a subject I hadn't even considered before.

Which then makes me wonder if I'm not suffering from a type of pernicious hindsight bias.  Maybe if I had thought about the subject before, I would have come to different conclusions and thus would be surprised to find these results?

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Ancient settlements and modern cities follow same rules of development
Recently derived equations that describe development patterns in modern urban areas appear to work equally well to describe ancient cities settled thousands of years ago, according to a new study led by a researcher at the University of Colorado Boulder.

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Using a man who has an external pump which is helping his own heart beat whilst he…

Using a man who has an external pump which is helping his own heart beat whilst he waits for a transplant, neuroscientists explore the ways in which we detect our own heartbeat.

Neuroscientists think we detect our own heart-beats via two routes – one is "somatosensory"; that is, we feel the movement of the heart's beat in our skin and this information is processed in the part of the brain that deals with touch. The other route is "vagal", based on fibres that feed directly from receptors in the heart to the brainstem and then onto two brain areas known to be vital for IA: the insular cortex and the anterior cingulate cortex.

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Neuroscience lessons in body awareness from the man with two hearts

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Computers taking care of us without us knowing it: Wikipedia edition

Maintaining all this data is a difficult job. It requires significant editing and polishing, mostly involving mindless, repetitive tasks such as formatting links and sources but also adding basic facts.

So much of this kind of work is automated. Behind the scenes, automated bots scan Wikipedia and Wikidata pages continually polishing the content for human consumption.

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The Shadowy World of Wikipedia’s Editing Bots | MIT Technology Review
Much of the editing work on Wikipedia is too mind-numbingly repetitive for humans, so automated bots do it instead. But keeping track of automated editing has always been hard … until now.

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Some days it feels like we know very little about how our bodies function

It's amusing to see fitness experts and gurus always taking such strong stances about the right way to lose weight when we're constantly figuring out stuff we didn't know before.

Lowell’s lab has made the surprising discovery that the hunger-inducing neurons that activate these AgRP neurons are located in the paraventricular nucleus — a brain region long thought to cause satiety, or feelings of fullness. This unexpected finding not only provides a critical addition to the overall wiring diagram, but adds an important extension to our understanding of what drives appetite.

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Surprising new clue to the roots of hunger
Researchers are creating a wiring diagram of the complex brain circuits that regulate this intense motivational state While the function of eating is to nourish the body, this is not what actually compels us to seek out food.

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On the one hand, I'm a sucker for a psychology study

 On the other hand, I'm extremely hesitant to put any stock in them since the field is rife with un-replicatable stuff.

Anyway, this sounds about right.  (Though, studies "sounding right" is probably part of the reason the field is in the state it's in)

A new study suggests that people feel more comfortable talking about private matters in a larger room at a larger desk. It's a result with obvious practical implications for professionals who require openness from their clients.

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How room and desk size affect people’s comfort discussing personal issues

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I love that the Java auto updater on Windows doesn't work correctly on standard…

I love that the Java auto updater on Windows doesn't work correctly on standard user accounts with UAC enabled.

I mean, it's only been 7 years since Vista introduced UAC…

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The Amazon Basin was more populated than you think

(Unless you already thought this, then it exactly as populated as you think.)

A hundred, fifty, or perhaps even 20 years ago, this idea would have seemed preposterous. Just imagine the Amazonian jungle, riddled with towns and cities – how can this be? Besides, if this was the case, then why haven’t we found any ruins, or other viable evidence? Still, more and more archaeologists are embracing this idea, believing that before Columbus arrived, the Amazon basin was actually a thriving area, with many populations, much more sophisticated and able to manipulate the environment than previously believed.

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Study shows Amazon jungle was dotted with significant towns and perhaps even cities
A hundred, fifty, or perhaps even 20 years ago, this idea would have seemed preposterous. Just imagine the Amazonian jungle, riddled with towns and cities

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