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What can DNA tell us? Place your bets now  from New Scientist - Online News  (2009-7-9 2:00) 
Scientists from Newton to Hawking have settled differences by putting their money where their mouth is. Now Lewis Wolpert and Rupert Sheldrake are continuing the tradition– and you can too
Phantom menace to dark matter theory  from New Scientist - Online News  (2009-7-9 2:00) 
A subtle anomaly in the orbit of the planets in our solar system could prove a controversial idea that goes beyond Einstein
Computer learns sign language by watching TV  from New Scientist - Online News  (2009-7-8 22:03) 
It's not only humans that can learn from watching television– software has worked out the basics of sign language in just 10 hours
Disease runs riot as species disappear  from New Scientist - Online News  (2009-7-8 20:00) 
Preserving the world's many species has an unexpected benefit, say researchers– it might protect us from deadly illnesses
This document will self-erase in five minutes  from New Scientist - Online News  (2009-7-8 18:34) 
Colour-changing nanoparticles could make possible a new generation of secure documents that wipe themselves clean after they've been read
Memristor minds: The future of artificial intelligence  from New Scientist - Online News  (2009-7-8 18:16) 
What connects human intelligence to the unsung cunning of slime moulds? An electric component that no one thought existed, explains Justin Mullins
[¥Ë¥å¡¼¥¹] ¥½¥Ë¡¼¡¦¥¨¥¯¥¹¥×¥í¡¼¥é¥µ¥¤¥¨¥ó¥¹¡ÖÂè15²óʬ²ò¥ï¡¼¥¯¥·¥ç¥Ã¥×¡×¥ì¥Ý¡¼¥È¡Á¥½¥Ë¡¼À½Éʤòʬ²ò¤·¤  from Robot Watch  (2009-7-8 16:44) 

Are lab-grown human sperm the real thing?  from New Scientist - Online News  (2009-7-8 8:01) 
If further tests can demonstrate that they are identical to naturally grown sperm, they could be studied in the hope of developing treatments for male infertility
Monkeys have a memory for grammar  from New Scientist - Online News  (2009-7-8 8:01) 
Cotton-topped tamarin monkeys can remember grammatical patterns, hinting that basic memory functions play a role in language
Murder and suicides climb during recessions  from New Scientist - Online News  (2009-7-8 8:01) 
When employment fell by 3 per cent or more in one go, suicides grew by 4.4 per cent and homicides by 6 per cent



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