Stomach Beats Can Tell the Truth About Lying
New York: Currently lie detection methods use heart activity, but now the stomach’s rhythm can be used instead quite accurately for lie detection reports the online edition of New Scientist. // India-born scientist Pankaj Pasricha at the University of Texas found that the heart is unreliable as it's affected not only by the brain but also by factors such as hormones, "But the gut h...Brain Is More Active While Hiding The Truth, Reveals fMRI Imaging
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) can help identify if an individual is lying much better when compared to the traditional polygraph tests. // The test further highlights certain specific brain regions that light up when a person tells a lie. Researchers from Temple University Hospital in Philadelphia have conducted the interesting research. The results appear in the latest iss...The Naked Truth about AIDS. Advertisements Drive The Point Home in Black And White!
The current advertisements forming part of the government directed Aids campaign has the potential to halt people in their tracks, and is therefore attracting// more than a second look. Hogging the arc lights, these adverts sparked off by the government has used stark analogy that shows naked men and women engaging in risky activities. A catchy caption, in tune with the visual, says “No...Virginity Vows by Teens may Mask Truth
New York, - A study aimed at gauging adolescent health, has said that those teens who swear celibacy and virginity till marriage, show a propensity to cover //the truth about their sex lives , compared to teens who are not so rigid about maintaining their virginity. The study analyzed virginity vows and sexual encounters among students between seventh to twelfth grade. The initial in...Malaria Truths Discovered By Einstein Researchers
Researchers at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University have managed to delve deep into the secrets of the malaria disease by using their previous research on tuberculosis.// The findings, which are published in the August issue of Nature Methods, “should substantially speed up research efforts to bring malaria under control,” according to Dr. David Fidock, senior a...