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Scientific American Content: Global

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Scientific American is the essential guide to the most awe-inspiring advances in science and technology, explaining how they change our understanding of the world and shape our lives.
661 Episodes
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A grassroots online movement has helped shift the way scientists think about asexuality. But much is still unknown.
Researchers once faced death threats for asking women what gives them pleasure. Now they’re helping individuals and couples figure it out themselves.
Research shows rough sex is becoming more common. Dominatrices are helping the general public catch up.  
Individual interventions for burnout don’t work. Researchers explain why.
Experiments planned for the 2024 total solar eclipse aim to figure out how the sun works.
We're talking about the big bang—but not in the way you might think. 
Sean Kirkpatrick looked into the skies and deep into government archives for extraterrestrials. What he found is, to him, more concerning than little green men.
These ancient Portuguese cattle have become unlikely firefighters.
Experts are starting to plan for the moment when a quantum computer large enough to crack the backbone of the math that keeps things secret will be turned on.
This year, healthcare providers have tools to help prevent lower respiratory tract disease caused by RSV for older adults.  This podcast was funded by GSK and produced for GSK by Scientific American Custom Media, a division separate from the magazine’s board of editors.
A noninvasive test for genetic material could predict embryo quality in IVF.
From Papua New Guinea to the Andaman Islands, Indigenous languages are under threat. An Indian linguist helped preserve one language family.
A new study used machine learning to “autocomplete” the life trajectories of six million Danish people–—and forecast when they might kick the bucket.
When symptoms start, COVID tests may say you’re not infected when you really are.
Injection of a hormone called FGF21 rapidly revives intoxicated mice.
Wandering albatrosses navigate thousands of miles using “the voice of the sea.”
The moon helps us keep time, inspires religions and shapes science, yet it still keeps secrets from us.
 Nell Greenfieldboyce discusses her new book Transient and Strange, the intimacy of the essays and the science that inspired them.
Dogs are good for you, science says. 
In 2013 a new user named Cleo took an online math forum by storm with unproved answers. Today she’s an urban legend. But who was she? A 2023 editor's pick. 
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Alireza Khavari

hi

Sep 4th
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