Knowledge of how the brain intuits what someone else is thinking helps Rebecca Saxe devise possible solutions to seemingly intractable political and social conflicts
By Gareth Cook | 14 hours ago
Cases of savant syndrome have inspired an electrical brain stimulation technique for boosting creative insight
By Allan W. Snyder , Sophie Ellwood and Richard P. Chi | Nov 29, 2012 | 2
At the driest place on Earth, one astronomer sifts through starlight to find clues about the Milky Way's evolution. Here is her account of a typical trip, based on four days in March 2011
By Anna Frebel | Nov 28, 2012 | 1
Quantum theorists often speak of the world as being pointillist at the smallest scales. Yet a closer look at the laws of nature suggests that the physical world is actually continuous—more analog than digital
By David Tong | Nov 26, 2012 | 33
When it comes to cultivating genius, talent matters, but motivation may matter more
By Daisy Yuhas | Nov 21, 2012 | 2
The pharmaceutical industry funnels money to prominent scientists who are doing research that affects its products--and nobody can stop it
By Charles Seife | Nov 21, 2012 | 32
New research reveals that animals interact in surprisingly sophisticated ways
By Katherine Harmon | Nov 15, 2012 | 1
10 innovations that are radical enough to alter our lives
By The Editors , Ferris Jabr , Katherine Harmon , Emily Laber-Warren , David Biello , Daisy Yuhas , Adam Piore , Christopher Mims , Marissa Fessenden and John Carey | Nov 14, 2012 | 20
Children of scientists and engineers may inherit genes that not only confer intellectual talents but also predispose them to autism
By Simon Baron-Cohen | Nov 9, 2012 | 11
Biologists have coaxed cells to form a retina, a step toward growing replacement organs outside the body
By Yoshiki Sasai | Nov 7, 2012 | 3
Renewing our commitment to gifted education is the key to a more innovative, productive and culturally rich society
By Rena F. Subotnik , Paula Olszewski-Kubilius and Frank C. Worrell | Nov 6, 2012 | 14
Quantum theory once seemed like the last nail in the coffin of pure reason. Now it's looking like its savior
By George Musser | Nov 5, 2012 | 29
A “rage to master,” as observed in some precocious young artists, may help define extreme visual creativity
By Jennifer E. Drake and Ellen Winner | Nov 1, 2012 | 1
Recent fossil discoveries reveal the surprising evolutionary history of penguins
By R. Ewan Fordyce and Daniel T. Ksepka | Oct 31, 2012
Loss of ice, melting of permafrost and other climate effects are occurring at an alarming pace
By John Carey | Oct 29, 2012 | 139
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