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What doctors actually want you to know about sports supplements

Athletic enhancers are big business. But it's not always clear which ones actually work – and what might be in them
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Meet the team tasked with saving Earth from world-ending asteroids

When asteroids come tearing towards Earth, we rely on ESA's planetary defence team to save us from disaster
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Scientists are now seriously asking if humans were seeded by aliens. Here's why

The idea that life on Earth began elsewhere in space has long been controversial, but it's now gaining traction
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How to beat the afternoon slump (without a nap)

Recent research is revealing what's causing your post-lunch lethargy and how to get your brain back into gear
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New issue: Think Yourself Younger

Your mindset matters. As I write this, I’m conscious it sounds like the title of an obnoxious self-help book or a soundbite clipped from a questionable podcast, but it’s true. There’s a growing body of evidence that your attitude – the way you approach the world – makes a big difference to your health. In fact, the effect is so strong that people with a rosier view of the future tend to live longer than those who are pessimistic, 7.5 years longer on average. There’s a more dramatic example that comes to mind if you still need some convincing that your brain can cure your body: sham surgeries. Under lab conditions, there are procedures for which the placebo surgery – an operation with all the elements of real surgery, from receiving anaesthesia, getting an incision and going through recovery – has the same recovery rate as the real surgery. The placebo is as effective as treatment. In fact, placebo painkillers can be effective too when it comes to chronic pain. It’s a take on medicine that’s well explored by the late Dr Michael Mosley in his film on placebos, which you can find on iPlayer (bit.ly/MosleyPlacebo). So it begs the question: if a positive mindset can lead to being healthier, can it also help slow the effects of ageing? Is there something to growing old ungracefully? Instead of expecting and resigning ourselves to aching joints and weary muscles, what if we adopted a more positive attitude, one that presumes the best years of our lives are still ahead? In this issue, David Robson examines what he calls the 'Expectation Effect.'
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Could scientists upload an animal brain to a computer?

From tiny worms to cloning yourself, welcome to the weird science of brain uploads
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6 simple science-backed ways to boost your attention span

Primed for constant interruptions, your brain is now distracting itself, says science. It’s time to break the cycle and retrain your focus
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How understanding nothingness might just explain everything

There's a big, gaping hole in our understanding of the Universe. Meet the scientists trying to understand it
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No, our ancestors weren't carnivores. Here's what they really ate and why it matters

Our hunter-gatherer forebears weren’t the carnivorous cavemen we once thought
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What we're getting wrong about dementia

There’s a lot of noise being made about a possible link between hearing loss and dementia. But what does the science have to say?
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