ScienceIQ.com

Butterflies In Your Brain

The idea behind chaos theory is that complex systems have an inherent element of unpredictability. The human brain certainly qualifies as a complex system. It is also a chaotic system. It does not behave in completely predictable ways, partly because it is always restructuring itself in response to environmental input. It is a constantly moving ...

Continue reading...

ButterfliesInYourBrain
Biology

Vampires

What flying creature can hop, leap, and turn somersaults? Another hint: it can fit in the palm of your hand and weighs about the same as a penny. One more hint: its entire diet is blood. Desmodus ... Continue reading

Vampires
Biology

Microarrays: Chipping Away At The Mysteries Of Science And Medicine

With only a few exceptions, every cell of the body contains a full set of chromosomes and identical genes. Only a fraction of these genes are turned on, however, and it is the subset that is ... Continue reading

Microarrays
Biology

The Red-Cockaded Woodpecker

In the mid-l800s, naturalist John Audubon reported that the red-cockaded woodpecker was found abundantly in the pine forests of the southeastern United States. Historically, this woodpecker's range ... Continue reading

TheRedCockadedWoodpecker
Astronomy

Black Hole Sound Waves

Astronomers using NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory have found, for the first time, sound waves from a supermassive black hole. The 'note' is the deepest ever detected from any object in our Universe. ... Continue reading

BlackHoleSoundWaves

Who was Typhoid Mary?

WhowasTyphoidMaryMary Mallon lived in New York about 100 years ago, and worked as a cook. It seemed that every family she worked for suffered an outbreak of typhoid fever! The Dept. of Public Health found that she harbored the bacteria salmonella typhi, which causes typhoid fever. Even though there were no antibiotics in those days, doctors did know how to culture bacteria from samples of blood, saliva, or feces. Mary was not an educated person, and couldn't believe she was really making people sick, so she refused to give up being a cook. Finally she was more or less imprisoned in a hospital for the rest of her life.

How could it happen that Mary Mallon was contagious for typhoid fever but not sick? Scientists agree that after recovering from an attack of typhoid fever, a few people harbor the salmonella as a film on their gallstones, hidden from the action of their immune system. Such people get well because their immune systems kill the salmonella that try to escape to other parts of their bodies. (People who have recovered from typhoid are immune afterward.) However the bacteria can still be spread to other people and make them sick.

It isn't clear whether everyone who suffers from gallstones can become a 'Typhoid Mary', or if there also needs to be something special about the strain of salmonella typhi that infects them.