For whom the births (and worms) toll
Studies of Bolivian forager-farmers shed light on costs of high birthrates, effects of pathogens on metabolism. (Source: ScienceDaily Headlines)
Source: ScienceDaily Headlines - July 22, 2016 Category: Science Source Type: news

For whom the births (and worms) toll
( < i > University of California - Santa Barbara < /i > ) Studies of Bolivian forager-farmers by UCSB researchers shed light on costs of high birthrates, effects of pathogens on metabolism (Source: EurekAlert! - Medicine and Health)
Source: EurekAlert! - Medicine and Health - July 21, 2016 Category: Global & Universal Source Type: news

"Coca got us here and now it's our weakness:" Fusarium oxysporum and the political ecology of a drug war policy alternative in Bolivia - Pearson Z.
BACKGROUND: A strain of Fusarium oxysporum fungus is killing coca plants in the Chapare coca growing region of Bolivia. Coca farmers are already constrained in the amount of coca they can grow under the government's community-based coca control approach, "... (Source: SafetyLit)
Source: SafetyLit - July 19, 2016 Category: Global & Universal Tags: Alcohol and Other Drugs Source Type: news

Sorry, But Your Refined Taste In Music Probably Isn't That Unique
Your obscure record collection is great and all but, I’m sorry to inform you, your preciously unique musical tastes are all an illusion. More precisely, they’re inextricably shaped by broader cultural norms and codes which are virtually impossible to avoid.   In other words, your taste in music is dictated more by history, and not your unique melodic preferences. This news comes courtesy of researchers at MIT and Brandeis University, who at long last determined that even the most basic of musical preferences are heavily informed by a long-standing tradition of Western music that has permeated you...
Source: Science - The Huffington Post - July 14, 2016 Category: Science Source Type: news

Sorry, But Your Refined Taste In Music Probably Isn't That Unique
Your obscure record collection is great and all but, I’m sorry to inform you, your preciously unique musical tastes are all an illusion. More precisely, they’re inextricably shaped by broader cultural norms and codes which are virtually impossible to avoid.   In other words, your taste in music is dictated more by history, and not your unique melodic preferences. This news comes courtesy of researchers at MIT and Brandeis University, who at long last determined that even the most basic of musical preferences are heavily informed by a long-standing tradition of Western music that has permeated you...
Source: Healthy Living - The Huffington Post - July 14, 2016 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news