Lance Pickens

Science Bytes

Bite-sized, two-host deep dives into the research papers behind the headlines. Each episode takes one new study — physics, biology, AI, the cosmos — and turns it into a clear, curious conversation you can follow without a PhD.

Autor

Lance Pickens

Categoría

Science

Web del podcast

sciencebytes.net

Último episodio

10 de jul. de 2026

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Episodios

The Hidden Cost of Stored Sperm Across the Animal Kingdom 20.05.2026

Storing sperm is common across nature, yet the cells deteriorate while they wait, a process called post-meiotic senescence. This Proceedings of the Royal Society B meta-analysis pools over 170 studies spanning humans and 30 animal species, from queen ants to hibernating bats, to map the universal evolutionary tradeoffs and costs of making sperm wait for its moment. This episode was generated by AI...

Do Sperm Whales Have Vowels? The Hidden Phonology of Clicks 20.05.2026

Sperm whales communicate in rapid clicks, but a Proceedings of the Royal Society B paper finds those clicks carry a structured phonology that mirrors human speech. Using a source-filter model of the whales' phonic lips and air sacs, researchers show the clicks contain distinct formant patterns that sort into two vowel-like categories, an 'a' and an 'i', layered beneath the rhythm. This episode was...

The World's Oldest Octopus That Wasn't 20.05.2026

A famous Carboniferous fossil, Pohlsepia mazonensis, was long hailed as the oldest octopus, pushing the group's origin back 150 million years and anchoring molecular-clock estimates. Re-examination with synchrotron scans found none of the defining traits, no internal shell, no suckers, no eye pigment, debunking the claim. Octopuses likely arose in the Jurassic, leaving a deep gap in the fossil rec...

Did Knuckle-Walking Shape the Human Hand? 20.05.2026

By 3D-scanning the eight interlocking wrist bones of over 2,000 living primates and 55 fossil hominins, researchers mapped how the human carpus evolved. The analysis nests us deeply among African apes, sharing features like a fused scaphoid-centrale that lock the wrist during knuckle-walking. The finding suggests our dexterous, tool-making hands were modified from a knuckle-walking ancestor. This...

One Urine Test, 34 Drugs: Inside a Tox Lab Upgrade 16.05.2026

Cleveland Clinic chemists consolidated two separate drug-screening assays into a single 34-analyte LC-MS/MS urine panel, published in the Journal of Chromatography B. By separating compounds and identifying each by precise mass transitions, the method avoids the cross-reactivity that produces false positives in antibody-based screens. The validated panel processes up to 1,000 patient specimens a w...

The Fat Byproduct That Warms You and Builds Bone 16.05.2026

Glycerol, long dismissed as a waste product of fat-burning, turns out to be a key biological switch, according to a Nature study from the Kazak lab at McGill. The team found glycerol directly activates the enzyme TNAP, flipping on the futile creatine cycle that generates body heat. The same enzyme pocket also governs bone mineralization, linking thermogenesis and skeletal biology in one mechanism....

Wiring the Brain With Engineered Fish Synapses 16.05.2026

Researchers built a tool called LinCx that uses engineered proteins from white perch to forge electrical synapses between two specific cell types in a living mouse brain. Mutated to dock only with each other and not native connexins, the proteins let scientists connect cell type A to cell type B, something optogenetics and DREADDs cannot do. The work, published in Nature, opens a new way to rewire...

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