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News Articles: Research News

An artist's impression of elephant birds in their natural habitat, Madagascar.

Tagged as: 

  • Science

Giant eggshells reveal the secrets of Madagascar's elephant birds

New research analyzing eggshells sheds light on the 1,000-pound elephant birds that once roamed Madagascar.

March 09, 2023
|
By:
  • Kai McNamee and
  • Christopher Intagliata
A new study finds that bumblebees can learn how to solve puzzles from each other.

Tagged as: 

  • Science

Can insects have culture? Puzzle-solving bumblebees show it's possible

A new study in PLOS Biology finds that bumblebees can learn to solve puzzles from each other — suggesting that even invertebrate animals may have a capacity for culture.

March 07, 2023
|
By:
  • Ari Daniel
Biophysicist He Jiankui addressed the last international summit on human genome editing in Hong Kong in 2018. His experiments in altering the genetic makeup of human embryos was widely condemned by scientists and ethicists at the time, and still casts a long shadow over this week's summit in London.

Tagged as: 

  • Health

Experts weigh medical advances in gene-editing with ethical dilemmas

The last time this summit convened in 2018, the world was shocked to hear a scientist had created the first gene-edited babies. He was condemned, but gene-editing has continued, with some success.

March 07, 2023
|
By:
  • Rob Stein
This imagery from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope shows the debris blasted from the surface of Dimorphos 285 hours after NASA's DART spacecraft smashed into the asteroid's surface.

Tagged as: 

  • Science

Astronomers still have their eyes on that asteroid NASA whacked

NASA's Double Asteroid Redirection Test slammed a spacecraft into an asteroid, directly altering its path through space. Scientists are still studying the space rock to learn more.

March 04, 2023
|
By:
  • Nell Greenfieldboyce
A new study of ancient human remains finds that horse riding may have been common as early as 4,500 to 5,000 years ago.

Tagged as: 

  • Science

Scientists find signs of horse riding in ancient human remains

Researchers have found evidence of horseback riding in skeletal remains of people who lived about 5,000 years ago, adding to a body of research on when people first started using horses to get around.

March 03, 2023
|
By:
  • Nell Greenfieldboyce
A new study finds that toothed whales can make a range of vocalizations, including some akin to human 'vocal fry,' thanks to a special nasal structure.

Tagged as: 

  • Science

Toothed whales use 'vocal fry' to hunt for food, scientists say

New research suggests that vocal fry among toothed whales is what gives them the ability to echolocate, hunting down their prey with the loudest sounds produced by any animal on the planet.

March 03, 2023
|
By:
  • Ari Daniel
GPB News NPR

Tagged as: 

  • Animals

Some whales use vocal fry to find and catch their food, new research says

Scientists have confirmed that toothed whales use vocal registers to produce a variety of sounds – something previously confirmed only in humans and crows.

March 02, 2023
|
By:
  • Ari Daniel
The Medical Minute (updated)

Tagged as: 

  • Research News

Medical Minute: Lewy Bodies

This week’s Medical Minute discusses Lewy Bodies, a toxic protein that gums up the works of neurons, resulting in problems like uncontrolled movement and cognitive decline in patients with Parkinson’s Disease. 

March 02, 2023
|
By:
  • GPB News Staff
A farmer shows the damages done to his cocoa plantation by an elephant in West Africa. New research says climate change is putting wildlife and humans in conflict more often.

Tagged as: 

  • Climate

Climate change is fueling more conflict between humans and wildlife

As climate change shifts resources and habitat, humans and wildlife are coming into conflict more often, new research finds. It underscores the need for interventions, the researchers say.

March 02, 2023
|
By:
  • Nathan Rott
Dr. Firdausi Qadri has been engaged in a decades-long battle against a microbial foe — the bacterium that causes cholera.

Tagged as: 

  • Global Health

Where this doctor finds hope amid her country's record cholera outbreak

Treating cholera has been a passion for Bangladeshi scientist Firdausi Qadri. She reflects on her career and inspirations, cholera's scourge, as well as successes in combating the disease.

March 02, 2023
|
By:
  • Ari Daniel
IMPACTS mission researchers inside the research plane, monitoring weather data being collected by onboard instruments.

Tagged as: 

  • Science

Scientists are flying into snowstorms to explore winter weather mysteries

A plane loaded with scientists and their equipment has been flying through frozen skies this winter, sampling cloud particles to improve predictions of which storms will wreak havoc on the ground.

February 27, 2023
|
By:
  • Nell Greenfieldboyce
The Medical Minute: Vibrating Capsule

Tagged as: 

  • Research News

Medical Minute: Vibrating Capsule

This week’s Medical Minute discusses a new vibrating capsule doctors think can help people experiencing painful, debilitating chronic constipation. 

February 23, 2023
|
By:
  • GPB News Staff
This hole was made in a Bronze Age man's skull shortly before he died, archaeologists say, based on several clues. It's the result of a surgical procedure called a trephination.

Tagged as: 

  • Health

Clues to Bronze Age cranial surgery revealed in ancient bones

Archaeologists have discovered evidence of a rare type of skull surgery dating back to the Bronze Age that's similar to a procedure still being used today.

February 22, 2023
|
By:
  • Ari Daniel
A NASA balloon launched over Hawaii in 2014 to test components that might one day be used to land spacecraft on Mars. Balloons are regularly used to test new designs and conduct scientific experiments.

Tagged as: 

  • Science

Researchers watch and worry as balloons are blasted from the sky

Scientists want you to know that most balloons come in peace. They're used for experiments to look at everything from cosmic rays to the ozone layer.

February 21, 2023
|
By:
  • Geoff Brumfiel
Research participant Heather Rendulic prepares to grasp and move a can of tomato soup at Rehab Neural Engineering Labs at the University of Pittsburgh.

Tagged as: 

  • Science

Spinal stimulation can improve arm and hand movement years after a stroke

Two stroke patients regained control of a disabled arm and hand after researchers delivered electrical stimulation to their spines, paving the way toward a medical device that could aid movement.

February 20, 2023
|
By:
  • Jon Hamilton
  • Load More

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