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Dave and Greta Munger Cognitive Daily reports nearly every day on fascinating peer-reviewed developments in cognition from the most respected scientists in the field.

Greta Munger is Professor of Psychology at Davidson College whose works include The History of Psychology: Fundamental Questions. Dave Munger is co-founder and editor of ResearchBlogging.org and a columnist on SEEDMAGAZINE.COM. And yes, he is married to Greta.

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Virtual reality for mice (the furry kind)

Category: In other news
Posted on: October 21, 2009 4:13 PM, by Dave Munger

In case you missed them, here are my picks from ResearchBlogging.org's Psychology and Neuroscience posts from the past week.

Also, if you're a member of ResearchBlogging.org, be sure to check out our new widget (like the one on the right of this blog). Now you can place the widget on your own blog so your readers can see the latest posts in your favorite topics, like "Psychology," "Neuroscience," and "Health."

Finally, my column is up on SEEDMAGAZINE.COM. This week I discuss the intriguing new findings about Saturn's moons and rings. Here's a snippet:

It seems the more we learn about Saturn's other moons, the stranger they become--Phoebe no longer appears to be the oddest one. Iapetus resembles the Taoist symbol of yin and yang, with one hemisphere covered in dark organic material and the other sheathed in bright white ice. It also has a curious ridge of mountains more than 10 kilometers tall stretched along its equator, making it look like a giant walnut. Titan, by far the largest of Saturn's moons, is the only body in the solar system other than Earth with a dense nitrogen-rich atmosphere. There, it's so cold that water ice is hard as rock, and substances like ethane and methane form their own "hydrological" cycles like water does here on Earth. Scientists suspect Titan might even be capable of supporting exotic forms of carbon-based life.

But Phoebe may not be so easily dethroned. The moon was back in the news recently when an October 7 report in Nature revealed that Saturn has a previously undiscovered ring, vastly larger than all the others but invisible to most telescopes. The next day, Dave Strickland, an astronomer at Johns Hopkins University, explained the research on his blog.

Saturn's new ring, spotted in infrared light by the Spitzer Space Telescope, was almost inconceivably large--36 million kilometers in diameter, or a quarter of the distance from the Earth to the Sun.

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Like it, linked it.

Posted by: SWP | October 22, 2009 12:25 AM

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