Scientific American – Mind

Scientific American – Mind

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Science-based coverage of psychology, the brain, and behavior.

When a Naked Mole Rat Queen Dies, that Usually Means War—But Not for This Colony
BlogApr 15, 2026

When a Naked Mole Rat Queen Dies, that Usually Means War—But Not for This Colony

Researchers at the Salk Institute documented a naked mole‑rat queen voluntarily relinquishing her reproductive role to a daughter, avoiding the usual violent succession wars. The experiment involved relocating a family colony, which caused the queen to cease breeding for nearly...

By Scientific American – Mind
Why Do Older People Have Fewer Seasonal Allergies?
BlogApr 15, 2026

Why Do Older People Have Fewer Seasonal Allergies?

Around 80 million Americans suffer seasonal allergies, but seniors experience them less often than younger people. Aging reduces IgE production and weakens immune responses, so older adults often develop nonallergic rhinitis rather than true pollen allergies. Meanwhile, younger cohorts face rising...

By Scientific American – Mind
A Face-Swapping Illusion Can Unlock Childhood Memories
BlogApr 15, 2026

A Face-Swapping Illusion Can Unlock Childhood Memories

Researchers used an enfacement illusion that displayed a child‑like version of participants’ faces in real time, creating the sensation of inhabiting a younger body. In a controlled online study of 50 adults, those who saw the younger face recalled significantly...

By Scientific American – Mind
Sperm Whales May Make Their Own Vowel Sounds, Similar to Human Language
BlogApr 14, 2026

Sperm Whales May Make Their Own Vowel Sounds, Similar to Human Language

A new study in Proceedings of the Royal Society B shows sperm whales produce two distinct click types, dubbed a‑coda and i‑coda, that function like vowel sounds in human speech. Researchers used spectrogram analysis to reveal that whales manipulate a...

By Scientific American – Mind
The East Coast Could See Blazing Hot Temperatures This Week. Here’s Why
BlogApr 14, 2026

The East Coast Could See Blazing Hot Temperatures This Week. Here’s Why

An area of high pressure is pushing unusually hot weather across the East Coast this week, with cities like Philadelphia, Washington, D.C., and Richmond reaching the 90s°F (mid‑30s°C). New York City is expected to see mid‑80s°F temperatures, far above its...

By Scientific American – Mind
Scientists Just Discovered 5.6 Million Bees Under a New York State Cemetery
BlogApr 14, 2026

Scientists Just Discovered 5.6 Million Bees Under a New York State Cemetery

Researchers from Cornell University documented an unprecedented aggregation of roughly 5.6 million ground‑nesting bees at the East Lawn Cemetery in Ithaca, New York. The bees, primarily the solitary species Andrena regularis, emerged across a 6,500‑square‑meter area during spring 2023, a density far...

By Scientific American – Mind
The Real Science of Pokémon
BlogApr 14, 2026

The Real Science of Pokémon

The Pokémon franchise is weaving real‑world ecology and climate science into its games and media. Ahead of the launch of Pokémon Champions, The Pokémon Company announced a hiring drive for Ph.D. talent in science, engineering, agriculture and ecology. New titles...

By Scientific American – Mind
New Evidence Links Heart Disease to Inflammation—And Drugs Can Stop It
BlogApr 14, 2026

New Evidence Links Heart Disease to Inflammation—And Drugs Can Stop It

New research confirms chronic inflammation as a major, often hidden driver of heart disease, accounting for roughly a quarter of heart attacks in patients without traditional risk factors. Landmark trials such as JUPITER, CANTOS, and a 2020 colchicine study demonstrated...

By Scientific American – Mind
Expensive versus Affordable Binoculars—What’s the Difference?
BlogApr 14, 2026

Expensive versus Affordable Binoculars—What’s the Difference?

A birdwatcher upgraded from a $200 Celestron pair to a $3,200 Swarovski NL Pure, prompting a deep dive into what separates premium optics from affordable models. The article explains core optical designs—Porro versus roof prisms—and highlights modern enhancements such as...

By Scientific American – Mind
Person Functionally Cured of HIV After Bone Marrow Transplant From Sibling
BlogApr 13, 2026

Person Functionally Cured of HIV After Bone Marrow Transplant From Sibling

A 63‑year‑old man achieved functional cure of HIV after receiving a bone‑marrow transplant from his brother, who carries two copies of the CCR5 Δ32 mutation that blocks the virus’s primary entry point. The donor cells fully engrafted in the recipient’s blood,...

By Scientific American – Mind
Dream Chaser Space Plane Faces Uncertain Future in NASA’s Push for the Moon
BlogApr 13, 2026

Dream Chaser Space Plane Faces Uncertain Future in NASA’s Push for the Moon

Dream Chaser, Sierra Nevada’s commercial space plane, was omitted from NASA’s recent lunar Artemis briefing, signaling limited near‑term relevance for moon missions. The vehicle’s first orbital flight remains delayed with no firm 2026 date, after repeated technical setbacks and the...

By Scientific American – Mind
Bizarre ‘Compleximers’ Break the Rules of Both Glass and Plastic
BlogApr 13, 2026

Bizarre ‘Compleximers’ Break the Rules of Both Glass and Plastic

Researchers at Wageningen University have unveiled "compleximers," a new class of glassy materials that melt slowly like traditional glass yet absorb impacts like plastic. By swapping covalent crosslinks for long‑range ionic bonds, the material remains compact during heating and can...

By Scientific American – Mind
This Method to Reverse Cellular Aging Is About to Be Tested in Humans
BlogApr 13, 2026

This Method to Reverse Cellular Aging Is About to Be Tested in Humans

Researchers at the Whitehead Institute have engineered a three‑gene cocktail that partially reprograms aged retinal nerve cells, reversing age‑related damage in mouse eyes. The breakthrough underpins Life Biosciences' first human clinical trial, which will deliver the Yamanaka factors—minus the oncogenic...

By Scientific American – Mind
How DNA Forensics Is Transforming Studies of Ancient Manuscripts
BlogApr 12, 2026

How DNA Forensics Is Transforming Studies of Ancient Manuscripts

Biocodicology, the fusion of molecular biology and codicology, now lets researchers pull DNA and protein data from medieval parchment without visible damage. By using eraser dust (eZooMS) or soft cytology brushes, scientists can identify the animal species, sex, breed, and...

By Scientific American – Mind
Beetle Larvae Mimic Flower Scents to Attract Bee Hosts
BlogApr 12, 2026

Beetle Larvae Mimic Flower Scents to Attract Bee Hosts

Researchers at the Max Planck Institute discovered that European blister‑beetle larvae emit a blend of 17 floral scent compounds, effectively mimicking flowers to attract solitary bees. The larvae cluster on stems, releasing chemicals like linalool oxide and lilac aldehyde, which lure...

By Scientific American – Mind
New Study Shows How the Brain Weighs Evidence to Make Decisions
BlogApr 11, 2026

New Study Shows How the Brain Weighs Evidence to Make Decisions

A new study published in Imaging Neuroscience shows that the brain uses the same evidence‑accumulation process for both free and forced decisions. Using EEG recordings while participants chose between coloured balloons, researchers observed a gradual “loading‑bar” neural signal that rose...

By Scientific American – Mind
What NASA’s Artemis II Tells Us About the ‘Overview Effect,’ Moon Joy and Awe
BlogApr 11, 2026

What NASA’s Artemis II Tells Us About the ‘Overview Effect,’ Moon Joy and Awe

NASA’s Artemis II crew completed the first crewed lunar flyby in over five decades, splashing down in the Pacific on April 4, 2026. The mission delivered unprecedented live video of the Moon’s far side, a total solar eclipse from orbit, and the...

By Scientific American – Mind
New Metal with Triple Copper’s Heat Conduction Challenges Fundamental Physics
BlogApr 11, 2026

New Metal with Triple Copper’s Heat Conduction Challenges Fundamental Physics

Researchers at UCLA have identified a new metallic phase, θ‑phase tantalum nitride, that conducts heat at roughly 1,110 W m⁻¹ K⁻¹—about three times the thermal conductivity of copper. The breakthrough stems from a highly ordered crystal lattice that lets both electrons and phonons...

By Scientific American – Mind
The Expanse Authors James S. A. Corey Explore Alien War in New Book The Faith of Beasts
BlogApr 10, 2026

The Expanse Authors James S. A. Corey Explore Alien War in New Book The Faith of Beasts

James S. A. Corey, the pen name of Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck, released the second novel of their new series, *The Faith of Beasts*, this week. The book departs from the human‑centric tone of *The Expanse* and places humanity under...

By Scientific American – Mind
Why Bombing Iran's Nuclear Power Plant Could Cause an Environmental Disaster
BlogApr 10, 2026

Why Bombing Iran's Nuclear Power Plant Could Cause an Environmental Disaster

Recent missile strikes near Iran’s Bushehr nuclear power plant have raised alarms that a deliberate bombing could breach spent‑fuel ponds and release radioactive cesium‑137 into the Persian Gulf. Such a release would threaten fisheries, drinking‑water supplies for millions, and could...

By Scientific American – Mind
Mysterious Heart Neurons Maintain Blood Pressure to Prevent Fainting
BlogApr 10, 2026

Mysterious Heart Neurons Maintain Blood Pressure to Prevent Fainting

Researchers identified PIEZO2‑expressing neurons that encircle all four chambers of the heart and act as high‑fidelity pressure sensors. In mice, selective ablation of these neurons caused a dramatic drop in blood pressure and prevented recovery after posture changes or hemorrhage....

By Scientific American – Mind
White House Budget Puts 54 NASA Science Missions on the Chopping Block
BlogApr 9, 2026

White House Budget Puts 54 NASA Science Missions on the Chopping Block

The White House’s FY 2027 budget proposal slashes NASA’s science program by 46%, reducing the agency’s total allocation to $18.8 billion. An analysis by The Planetary Society flags 54 major missions—including the Juno Jupiter probe, Venus explorers DAVINCI and VERITAS, and several...

By Scientific American – Mind
No, Shroud of Turin DNA Analysis Doesn't Show Relic's Origins, Experts Say
BlogApr 9, 2026

No, Shroud of Turin DNA Analysis Doesn't Show Relic's Origins, Experts Say

A new metagenomic analysis of the Shroud of Turin identified a mix of human, animal, plant and microbial DNA, suggesting the cloth may have been woven with yarn from India and exposed across the Mediterranean. The study, posted as a...

By Scientific American – Mind
The World’s Deepest Sensors Will Detect Earthquakes Around the World From Far Below Antarctica
BlogApr 9, 2026

The World’s Deepest Sensors Will Detect Earthquakes Around the World From Far Below Antarctica

Scientists from the USGS and IceCube have installed the deepest seismometers ever, drilling 8,000 feet into South Pole ice. The two instruments can detect earthquakes of magnitude 5 or greater anywhere on Earth with unprecedented accuracy. Their placement in Antarctica’s ultra‑quiet environment eliminates...

By Scientific American – Mind
What Is the Quantum ‘Ghost Murmur’ Purportedly Used in Iran? Scientists Question CIA’s Claim of Long-Range Heartbeat Detection
BlogApr 8, 2026

What Is the Quantum ‘Ghost Murmur’ Purportedly Used in Iran? Scientists Question CIA’s Claim of Long-Range Heartbeat Detection

President Donald Trump and CIA Director John Ratcliffe hinted that a new tool called Ghost Murmur helped locate a downed Air Force officer in Iran. The device is described as a long‑range quantum magnetometer that can detect a human heartbeat...

By Scientific American – Mind
In a First, Artemis II Moon Astronauts Make ‘Ship to Ship’ Call to ISS
BlogApr 7, 2026

In a First, Artemis II Moon Astronauts Make ‘Ship to Ship’ Call to ISS

NASA's Artemis II crew completed the first-ever ship-to-ship audio call with the International Space Station, marking the inaugural communication between a human lunar mission and an orbital habitat. The 15‑minute conversation occurred when Orion was over 200,000 nautical miles from Earth,...

By Scientific American – Mind
NASA’s Artemis II Astronauts Celebrate Epic Lunar Flyby with Stunning New Images
BlogApr 7, 2026

NASA’s Artemis II Astronauts Celebrate Epic Lunar Flyby with Stunning New Images

NASA’s Artemis II crew completed a historic lunar flyby, becoming the farthest humans from Earth and capturing unprecedented images of the Moon’s far side. The mission also featured the first Earthrise and total solar eclipse observed by astronauts since Apollo, along...

By Scientific American – Mind
NASA’s Artemis Era May Finally Solve Three Major Moon Mysteries
BlogApr 7, 2026

NASA’s Artemis Era May Finally Solve Three Major Moon Mysteries

NASA’s Artemis program, now in its crewed Artemis II flight, is laying the groundwork for a sustained lunar presence that could finally answer three long‑standing moon mysteries. Upcoming Artemis IV (targeted for 2028) will deliver the Lunar Environment Monitoring Station, creating the...

By Scientific American – Mind
NASA’s Artemis II ‘Free Return’ Trajectory Lets Gravity Do the Driving
BlogApr 7, 2026

NASA’s Artemis II ‘Free Return’ Trajectory Lets Gravity Do the Driving

NASA’s Artemis II mission began its return leg on April 6, following a free‑return trajectory that uses lunar gravity to swing the Orion capsule back to Earth without major engine burns. The crew set a human spaceflight distance record of 252,756 miles,...

By Scientific American – Mind
Trump Speaks with NASA's Artemis II Astronauts After Historic Moon Flyby
BlogApr 7, 2026

Trump Speaks with NASA's Artemis II Astronauts After Historic Moon Flyby

President Donald Trump phoned the Artemis II crew aboard Orion to commend their historic lunar flyby. The four‑person crew, including three NASA astronauts and a Canadian, set a new record as the farthest humans have traveled from Earth, reaching 252,756 miles...

By Scientific American – Mind
NASA’s Artemis II Crew Experience Total Solar Eclipse From Space
BlogApr 7, 2026

NASA’s Artemis II Crew Experience Total Solar Eclipse From Space

NASA’s Artemis II crew experienced a total solar eclipse from orbit around the Moon, with the Orion capsule witnessing 57 minutes of totality—the longest ever recorded from a spacecraft. The event unfolded after six hours of lunar observations and included views...

By Scientific American – Mind
NASA’s Artemis II Moon Mission Reaches Greatest Distance From Earth
BlogApr 6, 2026

NASA’s Artemis II Moon Mission Reaches Greatest Distance From Earth

NASA’s Artemis II crew reached a record‑breaking 252,756 miles (406,771 km) from Earth on April 6, marking the farthest distance humans have traveled since Apollo 13. The astronauts also passed the Moon at a closest approach of 4,067 miles (6,545 km), during a 40‑minute communications blackout...

By Scientific American – Mind
NASA’s Artemis II Astronauts Break Apollo’s Distance Record
BlogApr 6, 2026

NASA’s Artemis II Astronauts Break Apollo’s Distance Record

NASA’s Artemis II mission has sent four astronauts farther from Earth than any human before, reaching 248,655 miles (400,171 km). The record eclipses Apollo 13’s 1970 distance of about 205,000 miles, which was an accidental by‑product of an emergency lunar flyby. The crew—Reid Wiseman, Victor...

By Scientific American – Mind
Watch Live—NASA’s Artemis II’s Moon Flyby Is Underway
BlogApr 6, 2026

Watch Live—NASA’s Artemis II’s Moon Flyby Is Underway

NASA’s Artemis II crew completed a historic lunar flyby, becoming the first humans to travel beyond the Moon in over five decades. The Orion spacecraft broke the Apollo 13 distance record, reaching about 4,070 miles from the lunar surface and spending five...

By Scientific American – Mind
Bypass the Strait of Hormuz with Nuclear Explosives? The U.S. Studied that Option in the 1960s
BlogApr 6, 2026

Bypass the Strait of Hormuz with Nuclear Explosives? The U.S. Studied that Option in the 1960s

In the 1960s the U.S. examined using nuclear explosions to carve a sea‑level canal through Panama or Colombia, a concept tied to Project Plowshare’s “peaceful nuclear explosions.” The Atlantic‑Pacific Interoceanic Canal Study Commission evaluated 294 nuclear devices to blast the...

By Scientific American – Mind
NASA’s Artemis II Mission Is About to Pass Behind the Moon
BlogApr 6, 2026

NASA’s Artemis II Mission Is About to Pass Behind the Moon

NASA’s Artemis II crew entered the Moon’s sphere of influence and is preparing for a six‑hour lunar flyby that will bring humans within 4,070 miles of the surface. Day five featured emergency‑suit tests, a trajectory‑correction burn, and an Easter‑egg hunt aboard...

By Scientific American – Mind
NASA’s Artemis II Moon Mission Is Gearing up for Its Lunar Flyby
BlogApr 4, 2026

NASA’s Artemis II Moon Mission Is Gearing up for Its Lunar Flyby

NASA’s Artemis II crew has passed the mission’s halfway point and is gearing up for a five‑hour lunar flyby on Monday, April 6. Astronauts Victor Glover, Jeremy Hansen, Christina Koch and Reid Wiseman will photograph the Moon’s far side, targeting the massive Orientale...

By Scientific American – Mind
See These Ziti-Sized Fish Scale a 50-Foot Waterfall
BlogApr 2, 2026

See These Ziti-Sized Fish Scale a 50-Foot Waterfall

Scientists have documented the shellear (Parakneria thysi), a ziti‑sized fish, scaling a 50‑foot waterfall in the Congo River Basin. The fish press fin‑covered microscopic hooks against the slick rock, using bursts of upward motion interspersed with long rests, completing the...

By Scientific American – Mind
Why Do Black Women Have Worse IVF Outcomes?
BlogApr 2, 2026

Why Do Black Women Have Worse IVF Outcomes?

A University of Pennsylvania analysis of more than 246,000 IVF cycles found that Black women experience a live‑birth rate of about 45%, compared with roughly 60% for white women. Despite responding slightly better to ovarian‑stimulation drugs and producing high‑quality embryos,...

By Scientific American – Mind
Secrets of Color Vision Could Hold Clues to Treating Nearsightedness
BlogApr 1, 2026

Secrets of Color Vision Could Hold Clues to Treating Nearsightedness

Scientists have uncovered that the human eye automatically prioritizes the wavelength most prevalent in the surrounding scene, rather than simply targeting the brightest or middle‑of‑the‑spectrum color. The discovery emerged from a study using a wave‑front sensor to monitor real‑time lens...

By Scientific American – Mind
The Alaskan Permafrost Is Thawing. Here’s Why That’s so Worrying
BlogApr 1, 2026

The Alaskan Permafrost Is Thawing. Here’s Why That’s so Worrying

A new study shows that a Wisconsin‑sized area of Alaskan permafrost now releases about 12 cubic kilometers (three trillion gallons) of fresh water each year, a volume exceeding the total output recorded in the early 1980s. Between 1980 and 2023,...

By Scientific American – Mind
Inside a Bold Plan to Pulverize an Earth-Bound Asteroid
BlogApr 1, 2026

Inside a Bold Plan to Pulverize an Earth-Bound Asteroid

Researchers at UC Santa Barbara propose "Pulverize It," a planetary‑defense concept that would shatter hazardous asteroids using Falcon 9‑launched penetrators, ranging from tungsten rods to nuclear explosives. Simulations on NASA supercomputers suggest fragments sized 13‑16 feet would vaporize in Earth’s atmosphere, minimizing ground impact....

By Scientific American – Mind
Eat More Plant-Based Protein Instead of Meat, Top Heart Health Body Says, Contradicting RFK, Jr.
BlogMar 31, 2026

Eat More Plant-Based Protein Instead of Meat, Top Heart Health Body Says, Contradicting RFK, Jr.

The American Heart Association released new dietary guidelines urging Americans to replace meat with plant‑based protein, limit alcohol, and follow nine heart‑healthy eating steps. The recommendations echo the AHA’s 2021 guidance but cite stronger scientific evidence for unsaturated fats and...

By Scientific American – Mind
These Snakes Steal Poison From Their Prey—Here's How They Know They Have Enough
BlogMar 30, 2026

These Snakes Steal Poison From Their Prey—Here's How They Know They Have Enough

Red‑necked keelback snakes acquire potent bufadienolide toxins from poisonous toads and store them in neck nuchal glands for defense. A recent study fed wild snakes toxic toads or non‑poisonous frogs, then emptied their toxin reservoirs and simulated predator attacks. The...

By Scientific American – Mind
How to Build Self-Control, According to Psychologists
BlogMar 28, 2026

How to Build Self-Control, According to Psychologists

Recent psychological research overturns the classic willpower myth, showing that consistent routines drive self‑control more effectively than momentary restraint. Studies from 2015 onward demonstrate that high‑school students who followed structured habits outperformed peers who relied on willpower alone. Follow‑up experiments...

By Scientific American – Mind
How Ultraprecise ‘Nuclear Clocks’ Could Transform Timekeeping
BlogMar 28, 2026

How Ultraprecise ‘Nuclear Clocks’ Could Transform Timekeeping

Physicists are nearing a functional nuclear clock that counts time using the low‑energy nuclear transition of thorium‑229, a breakthrough achieved in 2024. The key remaining challenges are building a continuous‑wave ultraviolet laser around 148 nm and securing a stable thorium source,...

By Scientific American – Mind
We Thought We Knew the Shape of the Universe. We Were Wrong
BlogMar 27, 2026

We Thought We Knew the Shape of the Universe. We Were Wrong

A new study by the international COMPACT collaboration shows that the limits on cosmic topology derived from Planck’s cosmic microwave background data are far less restrictive than previously believed. The team demonstrates that certain looped universe models can avoid producing...

By Scientific American – Mind
Sperm Whales Help One Another Give Birth, New Study Finds
BlogMar 26, 2026

Sperm Whales Help One Another Give Birth, New Study Finds

Scientists aboard a research vessel off Dominica captured the first detailed footage of a sperm whale giving birth, revealing that the entire pod of 11 individuals cooperated to support the newborn. Machine‑learning analysis showed two female‑led matrilines working together, with...

By Scientific American – Mind
Why Your Psoriasis Flares up in the Same Spots
BlogMar 26, 2026

Why Your Psoriasis Flares up in the Same Spots

Scientists have discovered that skin stem cells retain epigenetic marks that act as a long‑term memory of past inflammation, explaining why psoriasis lesions repeatedly appear in the same locations. The study, published in Science using mouse models, combined epigenetic profiling...

By Scientific American – Mind