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United Academics Magazine publishes popular science news on a daily basis.

United Academics
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  • May 22, 2013
  • 07:07 AM
  • 17 views

Study Finds Why Penguins Lost Their Ability to Fly

by Katja Keuchenius in United Academics

If you’ve seen March of the Penguins, you probably understand the question. Many penguins live a shitty life, walking miles and miles without any food and spending months apart from their families. This would be over with if they just flew from one place to the other. So why did they stop doing that?... Read more »

  • May 22, 2013
  • 03:18 AM
  • 14 views

Science Proves Connection Between Racism and Stupidity

by Simone Munao in United Academics

In a recent research conducted by two scientists from Brock University in Canada, the authors have proposed and tested several mediation models. With such models they have proven that lower cognitive ability predicts greater prejudice, an effect mediated through the endorsement of right-wing ideologies (social conservatism, right-wing authoritarianism) and low levels of contact with out-groups.... Read more »

  • May 21, 2013
  • 08:53 AM
  • 46 views

Bright Lights, Cold Bodies - The Near-Death Experience Explained

by Anouk Vleugels in United Academics

Last February, Dr. Sam Parnia, an intensive care physician who has been researching near-death experiences for the past 15 years, published his new book ‘Erasing death: The Science That is Rewriting the Boundaries Between Life and Death’. Following the release of that book, Dr. Parnia was interviewed on National Public Radio in the US. It wasn’t so much this interview that sparked my interest, as much as the comments that followed. “It’s hard to believe that this gu........ Read more »

  • May 20, 2013
  • 09:24 AM
  • 24 views

Do We Really Want To Eat Mexican Food?

by Katja Keuchenius in United Academics

FIFA discoverd that a lot of Mexican meat contains clenbuterol. A drug used to fatten cattle, enhance sportsperfomance, treat people with breathing disorders ánd to lose weight. So watch it with those tacos.... Read more »

  • May 19, 2013
  • 08:39 AM
  • 29 views

Caring for infants is all in the-womans eyes

by Andrew Porterfield in United Academics

Human infants require a lot of care, and our evolution owes a lot of how well, and how long we take, to raise our offspring. So, it’s very important that not only parents pay close attention to their young children, it’s also evolutionary important that extended family members (grandparents, siblings, even friends) can give their attention to another person’s child... Read more »

  • May 16, 2013
  • 07:17 AM
  • 60 views

To Predict a Bird’s Song, Head Out to Space

by Andrew Porterfield in United Academics

Any given species of bird probably has a variety of different songs. Most bird studies track individual birds in their own habitats, and then make more or less one-by-one comparisons—a bird in a forest will sound different from the same species in a city. An international team has taken these studies one step further—by making a giant leap into space.... Read more »

Smith, T., Harrigan, R., Kirschel, A., Buermann, W., Saatchi, S., Blumstein, D., de Kort, S., & Slabbekoorn, H. (2013) Predicting bird song from space. Evolutionary Applications. DOI: 10.1111/eva.12072  

  • May 15, 2013
  • 09:12 AM
  • 45 views

Getting Science Right: Power Cables and Cancer

by Katja Keuchenius in United Academics

Some people would think twice before buying a house next to high-voltage power line. Wasn’t there something in the news about these wires causing cancer? Indeed many media have elaborately cited people worrying about the risks of electricity. But often without offering a scientific view on the subject.... Read more »

  • May 14, 2013
  • 10:04 AM
  • 41 views

Carnivorous Plant Ejects Junk DNA

by Geetanjali Yadav in United Academics

Research shows Utricularia gibba maintains a small genome size by resisting gene duplications.
... Read more »

Ibarra-Laclette, E., Lyons, E., Hernández-Guzmán, G., Pérez-Torres, C., Carretero-Paulet, L., Chang, T., Lan, T., Welch, A., Juárez, M., Simpson, J.... (2013) Architecture and evolution of a minute plant genome. Nature. DOI: 10.1038/nature12132  

  • May 14, 2013
  • 07:12 AM
  • 53 views

Turtle genome shows breathing is optional

by Andrew Porterfield in United Academics

Genome of the western painted turtle has developed a remarkable ability to go without oxygen for months. And this genomic change could point to better heart attack and stroke treatments for us.... Read more »

  • May 13, 2013
  • 09:45 AM
  • 34 views

A Quantum Version of Google

by Carian Thus in United Academics

A team of computer scientists in Spain applied a quantum PageRank algorithm to a network with 7 webpages. They found that the quantum PageRank sometimes ordered the webpages differently in terms of importance, but averaging the quantum PageRank score over time recovered the classical ordering.... Read more »

Paparo, G., & Martin-Delgado, M. (2012) Google in a Quantum Network. Scientific Reports. DOI: 10.1038/srep00444  

  • May 13, 2013
  • 07:27 AM
  • 52 views

Boosting your wage by lowering your voice

by Katja Keuchenius in United Academics

t’s sexier, we already knew that. But lower voices do more than just turning people on. It appears a deep sound also means more success in your career. A new study makes some pretty clear statements about the associations between wage, management power, tenure and the tone of voice.... Read more »

  • May 12, 2013
  • 07:55 AM
  • 41 views

Plants are listening, but how?

by Andrew Porterfield in United Academics

A group of researchers from the University of Western Australia reported a new type of unknown mechanism by which some plants communicate.... Read more »

  • May 10, 2013
  • 11:06 AM
  • 69 views

How To Make Yourself A Popular Tweeter

by Katja Keuchenius in United Academics

Twitter has a pretty bad reputation caused by a lot of people twittering about their personal issues. But is that really what Twitter is about? Researchers just discovered that this typical Twitter behavior actually decreases your followers. Time for a do’s and don’t list.... Read more »

C.J. Hutto, Sarita Yardi, & Eric Gilbert. (2013) A Longitudinal Study of Follow Predictors on Twitter. Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems . DOI: 10.1145/2470654.2470771  

  • May 10, 2013
  • 07:18 AM
  • 56 views

Looking Into The Personality of Adventurers

by Katja Keuchenius in United Academics

Some feel the need to explore more than others. This apparently random characteristic really makes a difference to personalities, a mice experiment shows. Those that like to be adventurous and have the capacity to do so, develop different brains than those who stay mostly in the same place.... Read more »

Freund, J., Brandmaier, A., Lewejohann, L., Kirste, I., Kritzler, M., Kruger, A., Sachser, N., Lindenberger, U., & Kempermann, G. (2013) Emergence of Individuality in Genetically Identical Mice. Science, 340(6133), 756-759. DOI: 10.1126/science.1235294  

  • May 9, 2013
  • 12:15 PM
  • 40 views

Gut Bugs against Diabetes

by Pieter Carriere in United Academics

A new discovery regarding the relationship between gut bugs and disease... Read more »

Markle JG, Frank DN, Mortin-Toth S, Robertson CE, Feazel LM, Rolle-Kampczyk U, von Bergen M, McCoy KD, Macpherson AJ, & Danska JS. (2013) Sex differences in the gut microbiome drive hormone-dependent regulation of autoimmunity. Science (New York, N.Y.), 339(6123), 1084-8. PMID: 23328391  

Flak, M., Neves, J., & Blumberg, R. (2013) Welcome to the Microgenderome. Science, 339(6123), 1044-1045. DOI: 10.1126/science.1236226  

Turnbaugh, P., Ley, R., Mahowald, M., Magrini, V., Mardis, E., & Gordon, J. (2006) An obesity-associated gut microbiome with increased capacity for energy harvest. Nature, 444(7122), 1027-131. DOI: 10.1038/nature05414  

  • May 8, 2013
  • 11:49 AM
  • 49 views

Getting Science Right: Hazards of Political Statistics

by Andrew Porterfield in United Academics

Radioactive iodine is dangerous, and public health and academic researchers are now trying to determine what long-term damage can occur, where it can occur, and how long it will take to occur. What politcs can learn from Fukushima.... Read more »

  • May 8, 2013
  • 09:42 AM
  • 51 views

Can Probability Explain Gravity?

by Simone Munao in United Academics

According to Dutch theoretical physicist Erik Verlinde, there is a new theory for gravity: Entropic gravity is a hypothesis in modern physics that describes gravity as an entropic force.... Read more »

  • May 8, 2013
  • 07:33 AM
  • 47 views

What did your ancestors talk about?

by Katja Keuchenius in United Academics

What subjects were important for both modern humans and our ancestors? A new study into the Eurasian primal language offers some important clues. Researchers found 23 words that are approximately 15.000 years old. ... Read more »

Pagel, M., Atkinson, Q., S. Calude, A., & Meade, A. (2013) Ultraconserved words point to deep language ancestry across Eurasia. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1218726110  

  • May 8, 2013
  • 07:06 AM
  • 31 views

What Did Our Ancestors Talk About?

by Katja Keuchenius in United Academics

Our modern lives don't have a lot in common with those of our ancestors. Still, scientists found 23 words that were already being used 15.000 years ago.... Read more »

Pagel, M., Atkinson, Q., S. Calude, A., & Meade, A. (2013) Ultraconserved words point to deep language ancestry across Eurasia. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1218726110  

  • May 7, 2013
  • 03:38 AM
  • 47 views

Music and Cannabis; What’s the Connection?

by Mark Fonseca Rendeiro in United Academics

When you bring up the subject of listening to music while stoned, you get a range of responses, almost all of them positive. While you might enjoy a song in a non-altered state, under the influence of Cannabis, it has been established that listening to and creating music is somehow a deeper and more intense experience. The disputed issue that arises is why this happens and if the feeling is real.... Read more »

Webster, P. (2001) Marijuana and Music. Journal of Cannabis Therapeutics, 1(2), 93-105. DOI: 10.1300/J175v01n02_05  

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