Google’s Arts & Culture app just added a suite of prehistoric animals and NASA artifacts that are viewable for free with a smartphone.
Search Results
You searched for: covid
The best time to start was yesterday, the second best is now.
A new study seeks to understand why the average body temperature is no longer 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit.
The vaccine just passed its first clinical trials, but it has a long way to go.
The very concept of a “problem with no solution” goes against human nature. But we must accept this harsh reality to have peace in our lives.
Don’t let a crisis be wasted. Use this moment to find meaning, purpose, and to refocus on self-care that will improve your mindset and relationships.
▸
with
State and local governments are hiring contact tracers to contain the spread of novel coronavirus.
Despite fact check campaigns, anti-vaccination influence is growing.
Two new studies shed light on the road ahead.
We have been rejecting science for far too long. We all need to embrace it. For as long as human civilization has existed, those societies that have embraced science have had […]
Creators of the popular protein-folding game, Foldit, are seeking help to design a treatment for COVID-19.
What symptoms to watch for, how to get tested, what to do if you’re sick, and when to go to the doctor.
Many workers moved home on the promise or hope that they’d be able to keep working remotely at least some of the time after the pandemic ended.
Join Big Think’s co-founder and president Peter Hopkins in conversation with Professor Linda Hill on what it takes to be a boss during COVID-19.
▸
with
Well preserved coffins hint towards more discoveries in a famed necropolis.
The bubonic plague ravaged the world for centuries, killing up to 200 million people.
The health care system isn’t ready for that, either.
Now is not the time to panic. But it’s the perfect time to get informed. The typical human body is made out of some 10²⁸ atoms distributed across approximately 100 […]
Americans lose an estimated 321 million work days every year due to anxiety and depression.
R is a way of measuring an infectious disease’s capacity to spread.
Join Big Think Live for a discussion with human rights advocate and best-selling author Shaka Senghor. Learn how the COVID-19 outbreak is affecting the prison population and why it has […]
▸
with
Working memory is the workhorse of cognition. Having less of it has side effects.
In Chile, the so-called “release certificate” would free holders from all types of quarantine or restriction.
Researchers figure out the infectious periods of coronavirus on cardboard, metal and plastic.
Trained dogs can detect cancer and other diseases by smell. Could a device do the same?
Surprising as it may seem, we are all very good at denial. Negation, however, is a different phenomena.
Colleges and universities can continue to ignore what the market wants, or they can get in the game and differentiate with new on-ground and online pathways to employment-centric education.
A Cornell Health physician has blended rap and medicine to better educate kids on coronavirus guidelines.
Data from LinkedIn suggests soft skills will be the most in-demand as the economy begins to rebuild and 2020 grads look for work.
The planet is making a lot less noise during lockdown.