Parsing Science Newsletter The unpublished stories behind the world's most compelling science, as told by the researchers themselves.
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Why We Love & Exploit Animals – Verónica Sevillano

Why is it that we treat treat various species of animals so differently? In episode 71, Verónica Sevillano from the Department of Social Psychology and Methodology at the Autonomous University of Madrid discusses her research applying social psychology and conservation biology to understand the relationships people have with animals.

The week's top science news from @ParsingScience ...

Proteins that sense light also sense taste

Light-sensitive proteins at the tip of fruit flies' snorkel-like proboscis, which it uses to sample it's environment, also allows it to sense bitter tastes.

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Why do false memories look real?

False memories of crime found to appear real when they're retold to others. Study participants were just as likely to watch someone recount a genuine memory, then misidentify it as false once told that some of the videos would feature false memories.

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Climate change encouraged colonisation

Within 100 years of settling the South Pacific, most likely from Tonga or Samoa, humans changed the landscape by burning native forest to make way for crops.

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How to fight COVID-19 with machine learning

Commentary on nine ways machine learning has been helping fight the coronavirus pandemic.

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Does mental practice still enhance performance?

Meta-analysis of 24 years of research finds that mental practice may have a small but significant positive effect on performance, especially for for programs lasting between 1 and 6 weeks.

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Forecasting economic impacts of natural disasters through social media

Indirectly estimating the downtime of small businesses via their social media activity may provide a convenient and reliable method forecasting the post-emergency recovery of economic activities.

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Yeast used to create the hallucinogenic compound in magic mushrooms

Starting with just sugar, scientists create a strain of baker's yeast that produces high amounts of psilocybin that is easy and cheap to extract.

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Upcoming guests

Amalia Bastos from the The University of Auckland will join us to discuss her article “The Kea show three signatures of domain-general statistical inference”  [already recorded].

Courtney Coughenour and Jennifer Pharr from the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, will join us to discuss their article “Estimated car cost as a predictor of driver yielding behaviors for pedestrians”  [already recorded].

Akchousanh Rasphone from the University of Oxford will join us to discuss her article “Documenting the demise of tiger and leopard, and the status of other carnivores and prey, in Lao PDR’s most prized protected area: Nam Et – Phou Louey” [already recorded].

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