Culture

Nigerians defy bad technology, violence in chaotic election

The 2015 elections in Nigeria were chaotic, but the country’s voters displayed immense courage in showing up at all. More than 20 people were killed, not in electoral violence between competing parties but by gunmen who didn’t want the elections to happen at all. A further 23 were rumored beheaded on the eve of the vote.

Cats in surgery relax most to the sound of classical music

According to research published today, music is beneficial for cats in the surgical environment. But not all music is equal in this respect - cats, it seems, benefit most from classical music.

More kids are skipping lunch

A new analysis of data from the 2009-2012 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) found that 3% of younger children and 17% of 9-13 year olds skip lunch on a given school day and 23% of 9-13 year olds skip lunch on the weekends.

There are far more pedestrians than bicyclists – but walkers get few policy efforts

Almost all of us walk somewhere every day of our lives. According to the UK’s most recent National Travel Survey 22% of all trips are undertaken on foot – and walking continues to be the second-most important form of transport for all journeys after travel by car or van.

For short trips of less than a mile, walking is totally dominant accounting for over 78% of all such travel. One third of all trips less than five miles in length are also on foot.

Data on abortion and miscarriage may change international policies

Two scientific studies led by researchers at Sweden's Karolinska Institutet are expected to form the basis of new international recommendations for the treatment of abortions and miscarriages. One of the studies shows that it is possible to replace the clinical follow-up examinations recommended today with abortions that include a home pregnancy test. The other study shows that midwives can safely and effectively treat failed abortions and miscarriages in rural districts of Uganda.

Comfort food desire linked to positive social connections

Most people say they have a comfort food and more often than not it is because of a good relationship with the person you remember first preparing it, according to the results of a new psychology paper.

From mashed potatoes to sushi, social factors influence our food preferences and eating behavior, they say. It is established that comfort food can reduce feelings of rejection and isolation but the new paper in Appetite suggests why certain foods are attractive when we are feeling down.

The secret lives of pandas

Reclusive giant pandas fascinate the world, yet precious little is known about how they spend their time in the Chinese bamboo forests. Until now.

A team of Michigan State University (MSU) researchers who have been electronically stalking five pandas in the wild, courtesy of rare GPS collars, have finished crunching months of data and has published some panda surprises in this month's Journal of Mammalogy.

Stereotype threat lowers math performance in women, even if women think it doesn't

While No Child Left Behind was in effect, American girls and boys achieved math parity for the first time in history. Regardless, it was politically unpopular and now there are concerns girls will begin to slip back again. Along with that are persistent claims of stereotype threat, which basically posit that since it is commonly believe that white males cannot dance, in a dancing situation they will be nervous about perpetuating the stereotype and dance more poorly due to the pressure.

First cause: Teenagers shape each other's views on how risky a situation is

Young adolescents' judgements on how risky a situation might be are most influenced by what other teenagers think, while most other age groups are more influenced by adults' views, finds a new survey by psychologists.

Budget cuts undermine global health innovations

As the world looks to American innovation to fight Ebola, malaria, tuberculosis, and a host of other health threats, a new report released today on Capitol Hill warns budget battles in Washington are eroding preparedness at home and abroad at a time when scientific advances are poised to deliver new lifesaving drugs, vaccines, and diagnostics.

The Mediterranean diet pollutes less

The health benefits of the Mediterranean diet are well-known. As well as being healthier, a recent article concludes that the menu traditionally eaten in Spain leaves less of a carbon footprint than that of the US or the United Kingdom.

The consequences of climate change range from species extinction to sea-level increases and the spread of diseases. For this reason, researchers have been struggling for years to alleviate its effects, even limiting the pollution caused by food consumption.

25 percent of high school seniors try smoking water pipes

Cigarette smoking is down, thanks to fines and taxes on cigarette companies used to fund anti-smoking campaigns - but hookah (water pipe) use is up, though only slightly by comparison to the smoking declines.

The state of vaccine confidence: Early results of a Vaccine Confidence Index

A decade on from the Northern Nigeria polio vaccination boycott and its global costs to the polio eradication initiative, a new report examines global issues affecting vaccine confidence and hesitation since the new millennium.

Questions over value of new antibiotics to tackle resistance

In the first installment of a new series, Peter Doshi, Assistant Professor at the University of Maryland School of Pharmacy and Associate Editor at The BMJ, asks why authorities are approving drugs with little evidence they do anything to tackle the problem of antimicrobial resistance.

We are hardwired to fall out of love and...

A review article suggests people are hardwired to fall out of love and move onto new romantic relationships.