
Tag Archives: Magazines
Cover Preview: Science Magazine – April 22, 2022
Preview: New Scientist Magazine – April 23, 2022

- COVER STORIES
- FEATURES What psychology is revealing about ‘ghosting’ and the pain it causes
- FEATURES How four big industries are driving the exploitation of our oceans
- NEWS MS reversed by transplanted immune cells that fight Epstein-Barr virus
- NEWS Blind Mexican cave fish are developing cave-specific accents
- NEWS Rediscovered orchid was presumed extinct for almost a century
- NEWS Tiny structures in rock may be fossils of earliest known life on Earth
Cover Preview: Nature Magazine – April 21, 2022
Life speed
Cells acquire mutations throughout life, a process that is known to give rise to cancer and has been proposed to contribute to ageing. There is little knowledge, however, about the rate at which mutations accumulate in species other than humans, and whether this rate is influenced by biological traits such as lifespan or body size. In this week’s issue, Alex Cagan, Adrian Baez-Ortega and colleagues address these questions. The researchers studied the speed at which mutations accumulate during life in 16 mammalian species and found that the number of mutations increases by a roughly constant amount each year. They also observed that the molecular processes causing mutations are broadly similar across species. Crucially, the team identified a strong anticorrelation between lifespan and mutation rate: longer-lived species accrue mutations at a slower pace than shorter-lived ones, such that different species have roughly the same number of mutations by the end of their respective lifespans.
Preview: Tufts Health & Nutrition Letter – May ’22
Previews: Humanities Magazine – Spring 2022

HUMANITIES: The Magazine of the National Endowment for the Humanities
In This Issue
Dueling: the Violence of Gentlemen
What honor required of men.
Politics and the Psyche
During World War II, François Tosquelles treated patients by addressing the sickness of society
A New Museum For First Americans
Oklahoma
Previews: The New Yorker Magazine – April 25, 2022

Christoph Niemann’s “Virtual Reality”
On the cover of the Innovation & Technology Issue, Christoph Niemann captures the eternal tug of war between the lure of the outside and the joys of technology. Even for a prehistoric cave dweller, the tablet could prove potently absorbing. The dilemma has only grown as the number and variety of technological gadgets has proliferated. We recently talked to the artist about the place of digital tools and good old-fashioned paper and pencil in his creative process.
Cover Preview: Science Magazine – April 15, 2022
COVER – A glass structure about 4.5 mm tall with features as small as 0.25 mm is 3D printed with microscale computed axial lithography followed by high-temperature sintering. The process enables the synthesis of highly transparent and inert glass parts with fine details, which are useful for a variety of applications.
IN DEPTH
Global project gears up to study vaccine safety
Pandemic propels international efforts to understand incidence of rare side effects
Earth’s oldest land ecosystem spotted in drilled cores
Campaign probes for earliest signs of oxygen-producing life
Thermal batteries could back up green power
Efficiency jump in key component raises hopes for storing renewable energy as heat
Previews: The Economist Magazine – April 16, 2022
Cover Previews: Nature Magazine – April 14, 2022

- Editorial | 12 April 2022The war in Ukraine is exposing gaps in the world’s food-systems researchRussia’s invasion is the latest threat to the stability of world food supplies. Researchers must act now to halt the cycle of repeated food crises.
- Editorial | 13 April 2022Global science must stand up for Iran’s imprisoned scholarsIranian researchers are at risk as never before. Governments are urging quiet diplomacy. But a new book shows why public campaigns matter.
- World View | 12 April 2022University culture wars over race theory recall 1920s fight to teach evolutionArguments for quality work better than quibbles over facts.
- Adam Laats
- Research Highlight | 04 April 2022The miniature mice locked in an evolutionary battle of the sexesThe African pygmy mouse, which weighs only 3–12 grams, has a complicated sex-determination system that pits males against females.
- Research Highlight | 04 April 2022Your morning coffee is served up by the birds and the beesExcluding the winged creatures from the branches of coffee plants meant fewer flowers and smaller fruit.
- Research Highlight | 06 April 2022Keeping it cool: a laser delicately carves up a crystal without heatingLight-sensitive dye molecules make a crystalline material sliceable.
