Parsing Science Newsletter The unpublished stories behind the world's most compelling science, as told by the researchers themselves.
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Birds’ Evolution Across Mass Extinctions – Daniel Field

Might a 66.7-million-year-old “turducken” be the world’s oldest bird? In episode 75, Daniel Field from the Department of Earth Sciences at the University of Cambridge discusses his research into a bird that mashes up features from chickens, turkeys, and ducks. Its fossil provides the best evidence so far of when modern birds first evolved and began to diverge before the mass extinction event killed the dinosaurs thousands of years later.

The science news most engaged with this week @parsingscience ...

Life history and learning

Special issue on neoteny, or extended childhood, indicates that long childhoods and extended parenting allow the time necessary to explore, create, and learn skills that take years to master.

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Trump-fueled promotion of unproved coronavirus drug

Prescriptions for two anti-malarial drugs rose 2,000% - from 2,208 in a week last year to 45,858 this year - after Trump supported them, despite coronavirus patients taking them being about twice as likely to die as those who did not.

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However, two elite medical journals retract coronavirus papers

The Lancet and The New England Journal of Medicine have since retracted two high-profile papers after a company declined to make the underlying data for both available for an independent audit, following questions being raised about the research.

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Procrastination and forgetting to do things we intend to do later

Three distinct procrastinator profiles (non-procrastinators, conscious procrastinators & unconscious procrastinators) forget to carry out planned tasks differentially.

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Listening difficult during racial discussions

Having encountered explicit racism or micro-aggressions and negative prior experiences talking about race-related issues, African Americans may be more likely to want to avoid conversations about race with Whites.

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Your dog wants to rescue you

Even without training, one-third of dogs found to try to rescue their owners when they call out "help" or "help me," so long as they understand what to do.

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No cognitive processing during sleep

The lack of transfer of waking experiences to sleep in humans, and the suppression of cognitive processing general anesthesia and non-REM sleep, casts doubt on the involvement of sleep in cognitive processing.

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