First LSD brain imaging study offers insights into consciousness

Scans reveal effects of the drug that correlate with ego dissolution, giving clues to how the brain creates a sense of self | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 5 years ago

Wearing a tie may be restricting blood flow to your brain

Tightly-worn ties have been found to impair the brain’s blood supply, prompting one scientist to suggest that it’s time to abandon them altogether | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 5 years ago

Spiders can use electricity in the air to balloon for kilometres

Spiders can detect atmospheric electricity and use it to fly - and maybe  drones of the future could fly the same way too | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 5 years ago

Some monkeys in Panama may have just stumbled into the Stone Age

One group of capuchins uses stone tools, but neighbouring groups do not – suggesting primates - including us - might enter the Stone Age simply by chance | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 5 years ago

Calling men by their surname gives them an unfair career boost

We are more likely to refer to professional men by their surname than women in the same jobs - making them sound more famous, eminent and worthy of awards | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 5 years ago

Every human culture includes cooking – this is how it began

Cooking makes food more digestible and kills off bacteria, and every human society in the world does it. But where and when it started is hotly debated | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 5 years ago

Many psychiatric conditions have the same genes in common

Several conditions including anxiety, depression and anorexia all share a common set of genes, which could lead to better diagnoses | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 5 years ago

US Army has made a plastic bandage that swells to patch wounds

Most soldiers who die from potentially survival wounds suffer from uncontrolled bleeding. The US Army developed a bandage material that can seal wounds faster and more effectively | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 5 years ago

Why is the UK running out of CO2 and what will it mean?

UK beer, fizzy drinks and meat producers have all warned of CO2 shortages disrupting supplies and have called on the government to act. So what's going on, and how bad is it? | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 5 years ago

NASA outlines its plans to deal with a large asteroid impact

NASA is designing and testing missions to deflect a potential asteroid from hitting Earth, and working with emergency responders to plan for a day when one does | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 5 years ago

Trump has directed the US military to establish a Space Force

President Trump has announced the creation of a Space Force, the first new US military branch since 1947, but it’s not yet clear what this new corps will do | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 5 years ago

DeepMind’s AI can ‘imagine’ a world based on a single picture

A neural network has taught itself to ‘imagine’ a scene from different viewpoints, including how shadows move and textures vary, based on just a single image | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 5 years ago

Boléro: ‘Beautiful symptom of a terrible disease’ (2008)

A painting of Ravel's Boléro, by a woman who shared a brain condition with the composer, provides a scientific window into the creative mind | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 5 years ago

How to keep the lights on without burning the planet

Ditching fossil fuels to go 100 per cent renewable is a dream within reach – thanks to new tech that keep things humming even when wind and sun aren’t there | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 5 years ago

The New Horizons probe is awake and ready for its next flyby

For the last 6 months, the New Horizons spacecraft that flew past Pluto in 2015 has been in hibernation, hurtling towards a distant rock – it has just woken up | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 5 years ago

Plasma to treat wounds instead of antibiotics

Plasma is a state of matter, like liquid or gas, that is fatal to bacteria, so a new wearable plasma patch is being tested to dress wounds | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 5 years ago

There’s no such thing as a ‘detox’ – so let’s ban the word

Using the word detox to promote drinks such as tea as well as food and other products is essentially meaningless. Time to give it a rest, says Anthony Warner | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 5 years ago

People with big brains have a different brain structure too

If you have a large brain, certain regions are much bigger than expected and others are smaller – but we don’t know how this affects brain function yet | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 5 years ago

Chicxulub asteroid that killed the dinosaurs caused massive global warming

The asteroid that struck Earth 66 million years ago caused dramatic climate change, which could mean we are underestimating how much the planet will warm in the coming centuries | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 5 years ago

Sound-can-leap-across-a-vacuum-after-all

Sound waves are carried by vibrating particles, so how could the waves pass through a vacuum devoid of atoms? The key lies in special crystals | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 5 years ago

‘Impossible’ EM drive doesn’t seem to work after all

A rocket engine propelled by electromagnetic waves grabbed headlines, but new tests find the EM drive may actually be driven by Earth’s magnetic field | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 5 years ago

Huge new Facebook data leak exposed intimate details of 3m users

Data from millions of Facebook users, including their answers to intimate questionnaires, was left exposed online for anyone to access, a New Scientist investigation has found | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 5 years ago

Mystery of the cosmic dawn: What’s eating the first starlight?

A shoestring experiment in the Australian outback has seen the signal of the very first stars – and a weird effect astronomers are struggling to explain | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 5 years ago

Lightning hit a woman's home and switched off her brain implant

Doctors are warning that some people should change the way they recharge their brain implants, after a lightning strike shut down a woman’s stimulation device | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 5 years ago

Festive flames: How to light a Christmas pudding

Watch our video to discover how best to flambé that cherished festive sweet | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Inside the secret chocolate garden built to avert a cocoa crisis

Pests and disease threaten our supply of cocoa beans, but in a field outside London biologists are working to prevent a chocolate meltdown. We paid a visit | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 6 years ago

Hung over: What science says about why you feel so rough

Hair of the dog? Wine before beer? Why everything you know about hangovers, and how to cure them, is wrong – or unproven | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 7 years ago

No more drama: The game theory guide to a happy family holiday

From who will host to the last piece of cake, ‘tis the season to bicker like wild animals. Have yourself a merrier little Christmas with some strategic thinking | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 7 years ago

Hangovers: What science says about why you feel so rough

Hair of the dog? Wine before beer? Why everything you know about hangovers, and how to cure them, is wrong – or unproven | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 7 years ago

How the rules of long-lost board games take us inside ancient minds

Humans have faced off with grids, dice and pieces for millennia – figuring out the rules of long-lost board games can take us inside ancient minds | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 7 years ago

Farting 101: The questions you're too embarrassed to ask

The most insidious consequences of the festive meal are a lot more interesting than you think | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 8 years ago

Farting: The questions you're too embarrassed to ask

The most insidious consequences of the festive meal are a lot more interesting than you think | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 8 years ago

The ultimate guide to stacking the dishwasher

A dishwasher is supposed to make life easy, if only we could agree how to load it. It’s time to settle the argument | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 8 years ago

Man vs sherry trifle: Can I eat myself drunk?

What happens if you try to get mashed on potatoes and sauced on sauce? It's a sobering insight into what really happens to the booze we cook with | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 9 years ago

Timeline: The evolution of life

The story of evolution spans over 3 billion years and shows how microscopic single-celled organisms transformed Earth and gave rise to complex organisms like animals | Continue reading


@newscientist.com | 14 years ago