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    Chewing sounds are less annoying if you think they come from an animal

    By Jason Arunn Murugesu
    The sound of others eating can be annoying
    miodrag ignjatovic/Getty Images

    People who are annoyed by the sound of chewing are less likely to be vexed if they think it is made by an animal or other non-human source, rather than a person.
    “I think most people can relate to having some level of aversion to certain sounds,” says Miren Edelstein at the University of California, but people with severe cases are said to have a condition called misophonia. “Individuals with misophonia experience aversion that is so severe and debilitating that it has a major impact on their well-being … More

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    Ruby Wax interview: We are addicted to bad news but we can break free

    There is plenty to worry about right now, but that doesn’t mean we should forget about the reasons for optimism, says comedian and mental health advocate Ruby Wax

    Humans 30 September 2020
    By Clare Wilson

    Rocio Montoya

    RUBY WAX is on a serious mission to improve people’s mental health. The American-British TV star, comedian, author and mental health advocate found fame in the 1980s TV sitcom Girls on Top and went on to deploy her comic persona of a brash, overconfident American in multiple comedy interview shows. Yet it is her experience with depression and stress that has shaped much of her more recent career. Her encounter with major depression 15 years ago led her to earn a master’s degree in mindfulness-based cognitive therapy at the University of Oxford, an experience she incorporated into a stage show. For this, as well as her writing about depression and mindfulness, she was awarded an OBE, one of the highest civilian honours in the UK.
    Wax has also set up community groups where, before lockdown, people could meet up and chat; these have now moved online. In her fifth and latest book, And Now for the Good News… To the future with love, Wax goes on a whirlwind world tour to meet innovators in schools, businesses and communities whose work she believes shows things are looking up.
    Clare Wilson: Now seems an odd time for a book about optimism. Why did you write it?
    Ruby Wax: We were besieged by bad news, even before covid. We were going on a drip feed, from one disaster to another, and we were getting addicted to it – at least, I was. I couldn’t wait for more bad news, and you could gossip about it. But where you pay your attention defines your reality. Your brain is shaped by what … More

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    Don’t Miss: Connected – an animated family road trip with wayward tech

    Sony Pictures Animation
    Watch
    Connected, in cinemas from 9 October, finds the Mitchell family trying to bond one last time, but the electronic devices they brought with them on their road trip have other ideas, in this animated take on the technological singularity.

    Read
    A Series of Fortunate Events occupy biologist Sean B. Carroll’s attention as he sets about explaining the role of chance in the evolution of our planet, our environment and us. Life might have turned out differently – but was it always bound to appear?
    Listen
    The Microscopists gather to discuss their work, their discoveries and their … More

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    How drones are waging a stealth war on the way we think about society

    Must-read book The Drone Age by Michael J. Boyle reveals how drone technology is challenging everything we do – and how we think about war and peace

    Technology 30 September 2020
    By Simon Ings

    MACHINES are only as good as the people who use them. They are neutral – just a faster, more efficient way of doing something that we always intended to do. That is the argument wielded by defenders of technology, anyway.
    Michael Boyle, a political scientist at Rutgers University in New Jersey, isn’t buying it. From commerce to warfare, spy craft to disaster relief, our menu of choices “has been altered or … More

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    We may be able to tell someone's heart rate just by looking at them

    By Grace Browne
    Can you see inside my heart?
    DEEPOL by plainpicture/Plattform

    We may be able to tell someone’s heart rate at a glance, which could help us interpret their emotional state.
    Alejandro Galvez-Pol at University College London and his colleagues showed 120 volunteers videos of two people positioned side-by-side. The heart rate of one of the individuals was shown on the screen, in the form of a square that changed colour from black to red with every heartbeat.
    The participants were then asked to say who they thought the heartbeat belonged to. On average, they guessed correctly 58 per cent of the … More

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    The Milky Way’s most massive star cluster may have eaten a smaller cluster

    The Milky Way’s core harbors two giants: the galaxy’s largest black hole and a cluster of tens of millions of stars around the black hole that is denser and more massive than any other star cluster in the galaxy.
    Most of the cluster’s many stars shine within just 20 light-years of the galactic center and all together weigh about 25 million times as much as the sun. New observations suggest that this “nuclear star cluster” owes some of its brilliance to another big group of stars, or even a small galaxy, that the main cluster swallowed.
    Nuclear star clusters exist in many galaxies and are the densest star clusters in the universe. Astronomers are trying to figure out how these gatherings get so jam-packed and how they feed the giant black holes at the centers of galaxies.
    To get a look at the Milky Way’s core, Tuan Do, an astronomer at UCLA, and colleagues observed about 700 red giant stars within five light-years of the galaxy’s heart. Because dust between Earth and the galactic center blocks the stars’ visible light, the astronomers studied infrared wavelengths, which better penetrate the dust.

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    “We noticed a very curious thing about our data, which is that the stars with less metals than our sun seem to be moving differently than the stars with more metals,” Do says.
    About 7 percent of the stars in the nuclear star cluster revolve around the galactic center faster than their peers and do so around a different axis, the team found. The data on infrared wavelengths indicate that this fast-revolving population is only 30 percent as metal-rich as the sun. In contrast, most of the other stars in the nuclear star cluster have more metals than the sun.
    “This discovery shows that at least some of our nuclear star cluster must have been formed from things falling in,” Do says. A metal-poor star cluster thousands of light-years away from the galactic core probably sank into the main star cluster, he and his colleagues report online September 28 in the Astrophysical Journal Letters.
    Do says the infalling star cluster was the victim of dynamical friction, a process that can alter a star cluster’s path through space. In this process, the orbiting star cluster’s gravity attracts material that forms a wake behind it. The backward tug of this material’s gravity then causes the cluster to plunge closer and closer to the galactic center.
    Scott Tremaine, an astrophysicist at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, N.J., who was not involved in the work, calls the team’s data on the nuclear cluster’s stars unique. “I think by far the most natural explanation is that [the stars] do come from a cluster that’s spiraled in,” he says.
    In a companion study, team member Manuel Arca Sedda at Heidelberg University in Germany and colleagues ran computer models to simulate how a star cluster falling into the Milky Way’s nuclear star cluster could explain the new observations. These simulations indicate that such an event occurred less than 3 billion years ago, and that the devoured cluster was roughly a million times as massive as the sun, the researchers report in a second study also published September 28 in the Astrophysical Journal Letters.
    That mass is comparable to Omega Centauri, the Milky Way’s most massive globular cluster, a type of star grouping that’s dense but less extreme than nuclear star clusters. “It’s definitely a lot,” Do says. Just a dozen or so massive globular clusters could have populated the entire nuclear star cluster, he says.
    Still, many of the nuclear star cluster’s other stars may have been born in place at the galactic center. And the scientists can’t rule out that the gobbled-up victim was a dwarf galaxy. Both dwarf galaxies and globular clusters can possess a similar number of stars. But their stars have different ratios of chemical elements, so future observations of the nuclear star cluster may be able to distinguish between the two scenarios. More

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    Don't Miss: The Story of Evolution in 25 Discoveries

    By Gege Li
    Visit
    Paradise Lost brings artist Jan Hendrix to London’s Kew Gardens from 3 October with an exhibition mourning Kamay Botany Bay in Australia. Kew founder Joseph Banks collected plants from it in 1770, when it was pristine.

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    The Story of Evolution in 25 Discoveries is palaeontologist and geologist Donald Prothero’s entertaining guide to the past, present and future of living things – with nature’s more bizarre aspects to the fore.

    The Trustees Of The British Museum

    Listen/watch
    Objects of Crisis is a hybrid series of Zoom podcasts in which British Museum director Hartwig Fischer reveals objects – … More

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    The theory of evolution is a vibrant, living entity still in its prime

    Nicolle R. Fuller/Science Photo Library

    THE theory of evolution is one of the greatest accomplishments of the human intellect. Some might argue that it is the greatest, although quantum theory or relativity would have their supporters too. But in the biological sciences, it stands unrivalled. It is no less than the grand unified theory of life.
    It is also a theory in the truest sense of the word: an interlocking and consistent system of empirical observations and testable hypotheses that has never failed scrutiny. Nothing has even been discovered that falsifies any part of it, despite strenuous efforts by detractors. … More