Look good in a hood: 10 best waterproof jackets
There's more rain on the way so make sure you style out the showers (and torrential downpours) in one of these practical coats
There's more rain on the way so make sure you style out the showers (and torrential downpours) in one of these practical coats
As you probably know, a lot happens in our brains between what we see (the photons that hit our retinas) and what we actually "see" (the scene that we represent in our minds). Even the size and distance of objects is open to interpretation, primarily based on cues in the environment. But do we also use our own bodies as size cues? In this study, the researchers used tiny and giant fake bodies to give people the illusion that they were larger or smaller than they actually are (see Figure 1 ab
January 15, 2014 An Animal Welfare Forum is scheduled for Thursday, January 30th at the Delta hotel and Conference Centre in Guelph. Further information……Read here.
Udacity CEO and co-founder Sebastian Thrun explains why self-driving cars are the future and Holy Grail for road safety. In this World Economic Forum discussion, the engineer and innovator describes how the auto-cruising vehicles will transform society and save lives.
Udacity CEO and co-founder Sebastian Thrun explains why self-driving cars are the future and Holy Grail for road safety. In this World Economic Forum discussion, the engineer and innovator describes how the auto-cruising vehicles will transform society and save lives.
Aggrastat. Byetta. Captopril. Integrilin. Prialt. What do these drugs have in common? Not what they're used for, certainly. From angina to diabetes, they treat different diseases or conditions, and all have very different markets. They're sold by different companies and were discovered in different laboratories around the world. But all have one simple thing in common: they come from animal venoms. Aggrastat was discovered in the venom of the saw-scaled viper (Echis carninatus). Byetta? A