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January-February 2012 (Volume 100, Number 1)

  • "How to Be Manipulative," by Robert M. Pringle
  • "Runaway Devils Lake," by Douglas Larson
  • American Scientist Classic: "The Experimental Analysis of Behavior," by Stephen F. Ledoux



March-April 2012 (Volume 100, Number 2)

  • "Gemstones," by Lee A. Groat
  • "When Scientists Choose Motherhood," by Wendy M. Williams and Stephen J. Ceci
  • "A Palette of Particles," by Jeremy Bernstein



May-June 2012 (Volume 100, Number 3)

  • "Mind Wandering," by Michael C. Corballis
  • "Herschel and the Puzzle of Infrared," by Jack R. White
  • "Plenty of Room at the Bottom?" by William G. Eberhard and William T. Wcislo
  • "Aquatic Invasive Species: Lessons from Cancer Research" by Adam Sepulveda, Andrew Ray, Robert Al-Chokhachy, Clint Muhlfeld, Robert Gresswell, Jackson Gross and Jeff Kershner
  • "Science Light: 40 Years of American Scientist Cartoons" by Sidney Harris
  • "Classic: The Soap Film: An Analogue Computer" by Cyril Isenberg



July-August 2012 (Volume 100, Number 4)

  • "Vocal Matching in Animals," by Kendra B. Sewall
  • "What Creates Static Electricity?," by Meurig M. Williams
  • "Acquiring Literacy Naturally" by Dominic W. Massaro
  • "The Study of Climate on Alien Worlds" by Kevin Heng
  • One Hundred Reasons to Become a Scientist or Engineer
  • Classic: Contemporary Criticism and the Criticism of Your Contemporaries?



September-October 2012 (Volume 100, Number 5)

  • "Graphene in High-Frequency Electronics," by Keith A. Jenkins
  • "The Complex Call of the Carolina Chickadee," by Todd M. Freeberg, Jeffrey R. Lucas, Indrikis Krams
  • "Slicing a Cone for Art and Science" by Daniel S. Silver


Pizza Lunch Podcasts

About once a month at Sigma Xi headquarters, we liven up the lunch hour with an American Scientist Pizza Lunch talk. In these informal lectures, scientists describe new research to nonscientists. The series is light on jargon but heavy on solid science. Each Pizza Lunch offers an in-depth look at its subject, whether it's bedbugs or the smart grid. Click below to read about and download these talks -- and to subscribe!



Read Us on JSTOR

JSTOR, the online academic archive, now contains complete back issues of American Scientist from its inception in 1913 (as Sigma Xi Quarterly) through 2005.

The table of contents for each issue is freely available to all users; those with institutional access can read each complete issue.

View the full collection here.


Indexes

Year-end indexes in PDF format:

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010


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