Docs Want to Rein In Plastic Surgery Circus Acts

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(Credit: therealdrmiami/Snapchat) To thousands of dedicated followers on Snapchat and Instagram, he’s Dr. Miami, a plastic surgeon who has made a name posting sometimes graphic videos from inside the operating room. Paired with rap music, quirky antics and bad jokes, the Miami-based surgeon has become a brand unto himself, with a waiting list stretching into the years, an appearance on the Today show and legions of fans. But the American Society of Plastic Surgeons would like h ...read more

Vagus Nerve Stimulation Restores Consciousness?

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A report that nerve stimulation was able to partially restore consciousness in a patient in a vegetative state has attracted a great deal of attention this week. The paper, published in Current Biology from French researchers Martina Corazzol and colleagues, is certainly promising, but I didn’t find it entirely convincing. Corazzol et al.’s patient was a 35-year old man who had been in a vegetative state for 15 years following a car accident. After recieiving consent from his famil ...read more

Aston Martin Dives Into the Submarine Business

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In recent years, Aston Martin has become the vehicle of choice for fictional secret agent James Bond. And now the British carmaker is taking its 007 reputation into the deep end. On Thursday—in Monaco, of course—Aston Martin announced it is partnering with Triton Submarines LLC to build a limited edition, luxury submarine that will have even the wealthiest of the wealthy playing catch-up with the Jones’s. The endeavor is codenamed Project Neptune and it will build upon Tr ...read more

We Almost Had Jet Packs on the Moon

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The Apollo lunar landing missions had limitations. The personal life support system backpacks moonwalking astronauts wore didn’t have replenishing stores of consumables. Once their power and oxygen supplies were low, there was no choice but to return to the lunar module, which itself could only support two men for three days. But in early 1969 NASA was already thinking ahead to longer duration missions, and to get the most out of these lunar stays, the agency commissioned two studies into ...read more

Drones Can Accurately Detect Heartbeats from the Sky

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(Credit: Shutterstock) Drones have the ability to do a lot of good, and recently they’ve been proving useful to rescuers in the United States by helping with hurricane recovery efforts. But what if they could do more than just document damage or survey areas? What if they could actually detect life? Researchers from the University of South Australia conducted a study published in Biomedical Engineering Online that shows drones can successfully measure heart and respiratory ...read more

An Unprecedented Number Of Species Have Crossed The Pacific On Tsunami-Liberated Plastic Debris

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These Asian amur sea stars (Asterias amurensis) were found ~5,000 miles from home on the Oregon coast.Image provided by Oregon State University March 11, 2011, 2:46 PM, 45 miles east of Tōhoku, Japan. Fifteen miles beneath the waves, a magnitude-9 megathrust earthquake strikes. The Pacific and Eurasian tectonic plates suddenly shift, shaking the surrounding crust for six minutes and creating a tidal wave almost 40 meters high, which races towards the coast of Japan. In the h ...read more

How Vulnerable Are Societies to Collapse?

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Research findings on three early Native American cultures from the southwestern United States show how each responded to environmental challenges in different ways that dramatically altered their people’s futures. (David Williams/SAPIENS) Along the cottonwood-lined rivers of southwestern New Mexico and southeastern Arizona, the Mimbres people did something unique: By the year 1000, these farmers were producing stunning ceramics decorated with naturalistic images of fish, people, and rabb ...read more

Space Sculptures, the Next Frontier in Art

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An Oribital Reflector prototype. (Credit: Trevor Panglen) Next time you wish upon a star, you may actually be wishing upon a giant piece of orbital artwork. Contemporary artist Trevor Paglen wondered what it would be like to launch his work into space, and with the help of Spaceflight Industries, a satellite and spaceflight services program, he is doing just that. His sculpture, which has been named the Orbital Reflector, is essentially an inflatable satellite. Unlike the thousands of other sat ...read more

Inspired by a Cat, Techie Turns Roomba Into Impressive Telepresence Robot

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(Credit: Rubin Huang) Who hasn’t, at some point, wished they could exist in two places at once? Today, you certainly can do that, but in practice, it’s far less sexy than cloning yourself or traveling back and forth through time to simultaneously exist in overlapping timelines. Instead, duplicating yourself entails beaming your face through a tablet device that’s mounted atop a moving pole. Indeed, telepresence robots on the market today are essentially Skype on wheels; they& ...read more

Study: We Watched the Crap Out of That Eclipse

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The total solar eclipse as seen from McMinnville, Oregon. (Credit: Bud Ellison/Flickr) As you may recall, we had a solar eclipse last month. It was kind of a big deal. After almost 40 years without a total solar eclipse, the United States got pretty lucky on Aug. 21, with the moon’s shadow crisscrossing the country and at least a partial eclipse visible in all 50 states. About 12 million people lived within that “path of totality,” and 47 million were within 100 miles. But ho ...read more

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