ScienceDaily: Strange Science News |
- Building living, breathing supercomputers
- Research team sheds light on 'rightie' or 'leftie' behavior in a scale-eating cichlid
- Scientists develop an objective, thermography-based method that allows to know if a person is 'in love' or not
Building living, breathing supercomputers Posted: 26 Feb 2016 10:36 AM PST The substance that provides energy to all the cells in our bodies, Adenosine triphosphate (ATP), may also be able to power the next generation of supercomputers. The discovery opens doors to the creation of biological supercomputers that are about the size of a book. |
Research team sheds light on 'rightie' or 'leftie' behavior in a scale-eating cichlid Posted: 26 Feb 2016 05:11 AM PST Behavioral laterality, or left- or right-handedness, has been reported in many animals, including humans, chimpanzees, toads, rats, mice, and invertebrates such as crustaceans and insects. Now researchers have shed light on the development of behavioral laterality (left-/right-handedness) in a scale-eating cichlid from Africa's Lake Tanganyika. |
Posted: 12 Feb 2016 06:19 AM PST Researchers in Spain have developed a method, based on thermography, that they say allows them to find objectively if a person is in love or not. |
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