Corporate campaigns manufacture scientific doubt by David Michaels From the September 27, 2008
issue of Science News https://www.sciencenews.org/article/corporate-campaigns-manufacture-scientific-doubt-david-michaels
This story appears in the July 8, 2017,
issue of Science News with the headline, «Birth of the Qubit: A quarter century ago, a physicist invented a concept that would drive a new type of computing.»
This article appears in the June 10, 2017,
issue of Science News with the headline, «Beyond today's opioids: Scientists search for better pain drugs.»
This article appears in the May 27, 2017,
issue of Science News with the headline, «The Difference Makers: Transposons sculpt our genomes, for good or bad.»
It will also be available in the November 7
issue of Science News Prime, the tablet version of Science News available on the iPad.]
This article appears in the November 11, 2017
issue of Science News with the headline, «Hybrids tell tales: When species manage to mix, they offer clues to reproductive barriers.»
This article appears in the November 11, 2017
issue of Science News with the headline, «The fuzzy art of defining species: A vital concept sparks many arguments.»
This story appears in the March 3, 2018
issue of Science News with the headline, «Brain - making 101: Self - assembling clumps bring a dose of 3 - D reality to studies of human organs.»
Every issue of Science News includes similar inspiration.
This article appears in the October 28, 2017
issue of Science News with the headline,» One and done: A universal flu vaccine might be nearing reality.»
This article appears in the Sept. 2, 2017
issue of Science News with the headline, «Cassini's curtain call: The spacecraft that put Saturn and its moons in the spotlight bids adieu.»
This article appears in the March 3, 2018
issue of Science News with the headline, «What makes a dinosaur?
This story appears in the December 9, 2017
issue of Science News with the headline, «Breaking Down Multiple Sclerosis: Researchers seek solutions beyond the immune system.»
This article appears in the December 12, 2015,
issue of Science News with the headline, «Gene drives unleashed: CRISPR brings a powerful genetic tool closer to reality.»
This story appears in the June 24, 2017,
issue of Science News with the headline, «The opportunity zone: Exoplanets found in a narrow band around M dwarf stars could host a very different kind of life.»
The January 11, 2014,
issue of Science News focused on the microbiome, the diverse collection of microbes that reside in and on humans and other organisms.
This article appears in the February 3, 2018,
issue of Science News with the headline, «Smartphones overshare: Devices can divulge a lot of info on your comings and goings.»
This article appears in the May 13, 2017,
issue of Science News with the headline, «The Statin Umbrella: Yes, the drugs protect hearts.
This article appears in the June 24, 2017
issue of Science News with the headline, «Prescribing a predator: Scientists study an out - there approach to fight infections.»
This article appears in the March 17, 2018
issue of Science News with the headline, «Smoke Signals: Burning peatlands have environmental researchers on alert.»
This article appears in the November 25, 2017
issue of Science News with the headline, «Adventures in Lumpy Space: Simulating the universe using Einstein's theory of gravity may solve cosmic puzzles.»
Not exact matches
He has been interviewed about immigration
issues by The New York Times, The Christian
Science Monitor, the Voice
of America and CBS
News.
Subscribe to the Afternoon Brief Trending Story: Gina Gallo Opens Up in Public The famously private head
of California's biggest family wine company shares some surprising truths... Today's
News: Wine Industry Reflects on Emerging
Issues, Trends and Recent Fires Shaping Future at Unified Symposium Every facet
of the wine industry, from research and
science -LSB-...]
The 2017 AAAS Fellows also will be announced in the AAAS
News & Notes section
of the November 24, 2017
issue of Science.
Science's
News team explores many
of the
issues that have arisen since the discovery
of the BRCA genes.
The findings will be published in the 16 January
issue of Science; they were released today when
news of the discovery began to leak, and the paper is now available online.
On January 11, President Bush's
science advisor John H. Marburger III, who oversees the federal scientific enterprise as director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP), issued a memo instructing the heads of all government research organizations to establish «appropriate policies to acknowledge more than one principal investigator (PI) when there is more than one collaborating investigator working on a Federally - funded research project,» according to a White House news r
science advisor John H. Marburger III, who oversees the federal scientific enterprise as director
of the White House Office
of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP), issued a memo instructing the heads of all government research organizations to establish «appropriate policies to acknowledge more than one principal investigator (PI) when there is more than one collaborating investigator working on a Federally - funded research project,» according to a White House news r
Science and Technology Policy (OSTP),
issued a memo instructing the heads
of all government research organizations to establish «appropriate policies to acknowledge more than one principal investigator (PI) when there is more than one collaborating investigator working on a Federally - funded research project,» according to a White House
news release.
Science covers news in all areas of science, from geology to genetics, as well as science policy and issues important to the scientific community, such as science, technology, engineering, and math education and sexual hara
Science covers
news in all areas
of science, from geology to genetics, as well as science policy and issues important to the scientific community, such as science, technology, engineering, and math education and sexual hara
science, from geology to genetics, as well as
science policy and issues important to the scientific community, such as science, technology, engineering, and math education and sexual hara
science policy and
issues important to the scientific community, such as
science, technology, engineering, and math education and sexual hara
science, technology, engineering, and math education and sexual harassment.
A version
of this article appeared in AAAS
News & Notes, in the February 24, 2017,
issue of the journal
Science.
In this
issue, the
news team at
Science names its annual breakthrough
of the year (see p. 1604).
Plus, we test your knowledge
of some recent
science in the
news, specifically the November
issue of Scientific American magazine.
Whether it is
news of a potential new drug for Crohn's disease, an aurora detected on Mars or a
science fiction — like 3 - D printer that makes objects from a pool
of goo, each
issue is chock - full
of the latest exciting developments.
For a window onto other branches
of forensic
science, see the special News report in this week's issue of S
science, see the special
News report in this week's
issue of ScienceScience.
ACCORDING to the August
issue of Lab
News, the Leader
of the Opposition, John Howard, has been saying some curious things about what would happen to
science and technology under a Liberal government.
Science News» special report (SN: 3/5/16) and subsequent stories in the March 19
issue sparked a flurry
of reader questions on the physics
of gravitational waves.
If you wish to quote from any part
of these article, we suggest that you credit the
issuing institution as the original source
of the
news release, in addition to mentioning
Science Daily as the source
of any link to the corresponding article on our server.
And for more on molecularly targeted cancer drugs, see the
news story «Combining Targeted Drugs to Stop Resistant Tumors» (free full text with registration) in this week's
issue of Science.
News of the explosion reached the International Astronomical Union on a Tuesday; on Wednesday, the day we went to press,
Science News editors slipped a mention
of it into that week's
issue.
Our e-mail address is
[email protected]; and also remember
science news [is] updated daily on [the] Scientific American Web site, www.sciam.com; and don't forget the September special
issue, the single - topic
issue of the Scientific American mMagazine, «Energy's Future Beyond Carbon.»
On this week's show: A special
issue on the role
of artificial intelligence in
science plus a roundup from the daily
news site
China is following suit, according to a
news story in the same
issue of Science, launching the Erdos coal - to - liquid plant in Inner Mongolia that will capture some
of its 3.6 million metric tons
of CO2 emissions and use it to flush out oil from nearby fields.
See this week's
issue of Science's for the full
news article on this study.
The
news follows a warning
issued late last month by the Australian Academy
of Science that the country's strategic position in Antarctica is at risk because
of a declining scientific effort there.
For a list
of other candidates, please see AAAS
News & Notes in the 25 September 2009
issue of Science.
Check out the 6 December print
issue of Science for a
news package on snakes, including more on the genomes, a story about efforts to develop drugs from venom, and a report about the fight against the invasive brown tree snake in Guam.
Science's special
news section, titled Mysteries
of the Cell (available free with registration), which appeared in the 25 November
issue, highlights how much we still need to know about our cells.
Meanwhile, get your
science news at our website, www.scientificamerican.com, or you can also check out the November
issue of the magazine, including a long planned article about how the construction
of Egypt's great pyramid changed civilization.
Get your
science news at www.ScientificAmerican.com or you can check out the multimedia look at artificial photosynthesis based on an article in the current
issue of Scientific American called [«Reinventing the Leaf»].
A
news article written by Robert F. Service in a recent
issue of Science «DNA makes lifeless materials shapeshift» describes another major advance from Mirkin's group, taking their 2011 advance to the next level:
Appropos to the
issue of science policy and
science reporting, this is excellent
news: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/11/14/AR2006111401176.html