Recent comments in /f/science

Veasna1 t1_j89f0qu wrote

Sure and 80 billion landanimals and 1,42 trillion marine animals are all breatharians right. Because that are the numbers killed to sate everyones desire to eat animal products. Huge amounts of land and rainforest are cleared for that.

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Purple_Passion000 t1_j89dkyb wrote

What about those songs that we don't appreciate in the first listen, but become one of our favorites over time? I can't be the only one this happens to. It may not be the catchiest, but it becomes a frequently played piece. For me it doesn't happen much with pop songs that are meant to catch you immediately, but definitely with songs from shows and film.

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redditguy1974 t1_j89c7gt wrote

I don't have any traveling bug any more. I spent over seven years of my career traveling. 60 international cities in 20 countries, and over 100 cities in the US, spending at least a week in each with plenty of time off. So I don't have any need to see any more. I am happy going, but I don't feel any need to. I'm much more of a home body and enjoy my time at home being productive.

I would tell anyone....if you are dating someone with true intent to travel the world, and you do not have that bug, you should break up. Because it will cause issues.

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Wagamaga OP t1_j89ahnd wrote

Chinese researchers have reported what they claim is the world’s youngest person diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease, which may overturn the conventional perception that cognitive impairment rarely occurs in young people. A 19-year-old male was diagnosed with probable Alzheimer’s disease after his memory declined gradually over two years, according to researchers from Capital Medical University’s Xuanwu Hospital in Beijing. The authors said the patient had characteristics typical of Alzheimer’s disease, including memory loss and hippocampal atrophy, a shrinkage that is an early marker of the disease.

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36565128/

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