Why Some People "Hear" Silent GIFs
This week, researchers published their findings on the largest study to date on the phenomenon, which is called visually evoked auditory response or vEAR
Kids Are Drawing Women Scientists More Often Than They Did Decades Ago
But analysis of studies over the past 50 years show that sketches of male scientists still dominate
Order Makes Cities Easy to Navigate—It May Also Make Them Hotter
Physics and statistics can describe how building patterns relate to cities' tendency to hold heat
Did Cave Acoustics Play a Role in the Development of Language?
In a new paper, researchers hypothesize that the location of cave art and sounds early humans heard might be linked
Why Music Is Not a Universal Language
Physics and culture shape music, but as a recent video essay breaks it down, the results are more varied that most people think
Tracking Fishing Vessels Reveals Industry's Toll on the Ocean
Satellites and artificial intelligence fill in gaps in global fisheries knowledge
This Account is Reclaiming the Indigenous Names for Mountains One Geotag at a Time
A Navajo climber is leading a social media campaign to spread awareness of the indigenous names of peaks
Scientists Create a New Form of Light by Linking Photons
Photons typically don't interact, but physicists bound three together in the lab
Photographs Documenting the Struggle for Women's Suffrage Are Reimagined in Full Color
Colorizer Tom Marshall's deft touch brings new life to 100-year-old photographs
Researchers Mature Human Eggs in the Lab for the First Time
Developing eggs so they are ready to be fertilized could help women who have trouble producing their own
New Super Wood Beats Metals in Feats of Strength
A new method combining chemical, pressure and heat treatments can create ultra-dense material that is stronger than steel
This Textbook Helps Teach English in Downtown Los Angeles' Skid Row
The readings are geared to engage and inspire adults hoping to improve their literacy skills
Study Uncovers Startling Number of Black Lung Cases in Coal Miners
Miners are contracting the disease with striking frequency and at younger ages than ever before
The History of Military Parades in the U.S.
Displays of military might aren't common in modern America outside of wartime
Database Sheds New Light on New York's Historic Ties to Slavery
A new index contains searchable records of slavery from birth registrations to runaway slave advertisements
Scientists Make Weird Type of Ice Halfway Between Solid and Liquid
The strange form of ice could help explain the odd magnetic fields seen around Uranus and Neptune
Did Vikings Bury Their Dead in Clothing Bearing the Arabic Word for "Allah"?
While contact between Vikings and Muslim cultures is well documented, the interpretation of the 10th-century burial cloth has been called into question
Scientists Peek Across the Galaxy to the "Dark Side" of the Milky Way
Until now, researchers haven't been able to map half of the galaxy we call home
The Navajo Nation Might Lift a Longstanding Ban on Genetic Research
A policy written by tribal officials could help alleviate ethical concerns and guide genetic research and data sharing
A Century After WWI, a Victory Garden Sows Seeds of Remembrance
The Library of Congress is playing host to heirloom vegetables and traditional growing methods that date back to 1917
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