‘Olfactory Training’ during Sleep Could Help Your Memory
Participants who smelled odors while they slept performed better on word-recall tests
Participants who smelled odors while they slept performed better on word-recall tests
Coral trysts by moonlight in French Polynesia, polluted Antarctic wilderness, mummified bees in Portugal, and more in this month’s Quick Hits
Glasses that provide subtitles for conversations could be a boon to people with hearing loss
Scientists are now growing mycelium, the fungal root network, into fire-retardant sheets to provide a safer, nontoxic way to protect buildings
An astronomy festival in Italy opted to make all of its events and workshops multisensory. The organizers wanted to see whether sound, touch and smell can, like sight, transmit the wonders of the cosmos.
A blind astronomer “sonified” the universe’s most explosive events: gamma-ray bursts. By listening to, rather than looking at, the data, she made a critical discovery and changed the field of astronomy.
Space is famously silent, but astronomers and musicians are increasingly turning astronomical data into sound as a way to make discoveries and inspire people who are blind or visually impaired.
Telecommunications grids are vulnerable to worsening climate disasters—which highlights the importance of one age-old survival system
Nanoparticles can allow long-term freezing of transplant organs
Ancient poop pathogens in Israel, Peru’s millennia-old El Niño preparations, a halt to Icelandic whale hunting, and much more in this month’s Quick Hits
Fears of “social contagion,” used to support anti-transgender legislation, are not supported by science
This 150-year-old tree has been a cultural hub for Hawaii’s town of Lahaina for centuries
Scientists have developed a new model to predict how much “gravity waves” could alter a star’s brightness
By inhibiting part of rats’ brain stem, scientists may have found the play center of the brain
Archaeologists found evidence of spices such as turmeric and cloves from ancient Vietnam, suggesting South Asians shared their culinary traditions via an ancient maritime trade route
The Barbie movie’s plastic pink world might not be that fantastic in real life
Russia and other nations are working on “sovereign Internet” systems that threaten digital rights—and the stability of the global Internet
Satellites and other technologies are spurring a new revolution in volcanic activity monitoring
Experts explain why tick-borne illnesses are increasing in the U.S. and offer tips to prevent bites
Arousal without orgasm isn’t dangerous, so why are people pressured to engage in unwanted sexual activity to avoid it?
Turning astronomical data into sound rather than images can inspire blind and visually impaired people—and maybe lead to some discoveries, too