by Chris Tachibana | Dec 3, 2018 | ScienceWire
Julia Goldstein has two recent stories of new technology that benefits business and the environment. In Seattle Business Magazine, Julia (@jlfgoldstein) writes about a startup that puts low-cost sensors in sewers to monitor stormwater and track potentially polluted...
by Chris Tachibana | Dec 3, 2018 | ScienceWire
Feeling the effects of opioids requires more than just taking a pill, Wudan Yan writes. In Nature Medicine, she reports on studies showing that, in mice at least, the bacterial composition of the gut influences sensitivity to morphine and related drugs. Read the...
by Chris Tachibana | Dec 3, 2018 | ScienceWire
Samantha Larson’s personal account in High Country News of her lifelong relationship with the San Juan Islands moved many readers. One was fellow NSWA member and current NSWA Secretary Ashley Braun, who visited the San Juans with Samantha and other friends. Ashley...
by Chris Tachibana | Dec 3, 2018 | ScienceWire
Virtual reality is for more than just games, writes Amanda Pain for the University of Washington. Amanda explains work at the Department of Environmental & Occupational Health Sciences on VR safety training for people who work in confined spaces, for example in...
by Chris Tachibana | Nov 1, 2018 | ScienceWire
Ants don’t get into traffic jams. That’s what Rachel Berkowitz found in her reporting on a Georgia Tech research project. The scientists are using soft-matter physics to figure out how ants can crowd into a narrow space but still move efficiently. Can you bring that...
by Chris Tachibana | Nov 1, 2018 | ScienceWire
Phuong Le, Associated Press writer based in Seattle, is covering a federal lawsuit that originated in Oregon. Young activists are suing the U.S. government for policies that ignore climate change and deprive them of life, liberty and property. Follow @AP_Phuong, where...