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  • NIH High-Risk, High-Reward Funding for “Outside-the-Box” Ideas

    The NIH Common Fund has active funding opportunities for the High-Risk, High-Reward Research program. These funding opportunities seek outside-the-box research ideas that if successful would have a large impact in an area of research relevant to the broad mission of NIH.

  • Parents Fine-Tune Their Speech to Children’s Vocabulary Knowledge

    Researchers have developed a method to experimentally evaluate how parents use what they know about their children’s language when they talk to them.

  • Did a Cuttlefish Write This?

    Captive cuttlefish require entertainment when they eat. Dinner and a show — if they can’t get live prey, then they need some dancing from a dead shrimp on a stick in their tank. When the food looks alive, the little cephalopods, which look like iridescent footballs with eight short arms and two tentacles, are more likely to eat it. Because a person standing before them has to jiggle it, the animals start to recognize that mealtime and a looming human-shaped outline go together. As soon as a person walks into the room, “they all swim to the front of the tank saying, give me food!” said Trevor Wardill, a biologist at the University of Minnesota who studies cuttlefish vision.

  • How Our Emotional Lives Improve with Age

    When we are young, our skills tend to improve with age and experience. But once we are well into adulthood, it may start to feel as if it’s all downhill. With every advancing year, we become slightly more forgetful, somewhat slower to respond, a little less energetic. Yet there is at least one important exception: In the emotional realm, older people rule supreme.

  • Perfectionism Can Become a Vicious Cycle in Families

    Roshni Ray Ricchetti was 16 years old when she arrived at MIT with perfect SAT scores and “lots and lots” of AP credits. She said her parents pushed her to make the absolute most of her talents. “I was a very, very high-performing student who, frankly, crashed and burned. I dropped out of MIT. And I’ve ended up okay in spite of that,” the Illinois-based science editor told me. But while she says she doesn’t want to expect too much of her own three children, Ricchetti worries that her daughter might not be “exceptional” at anything. “It drives me nuts that she’s not two full years ahead in Khan Academy, which I make my kids do on the side,” she said.

  • New NSF GRFP Solicitation Anticipates More Fellowships for Early-Career Scientists

    In a wonderful development for student scientists, the just-issued program solicitation for the GRFP indicates that NSF intends to increase the number of awards award in the upcoming cycle.

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