01-02-2025, 01:55 PM
Hgas io9 Book Club Reminder: Meeting 2/5 to Discuss Warren Ellis The Gun Machine
The placebo effect seems to make no sense: get mildly ill, take a dummy pill without knowing it ineffective, and you ;ll recover in much the same way as someone taking real drugs. But new evidence suggests that we might have evolved the placebo effect to save energy. New Scientist reports that new computer simulations seem to support an off-the-wall theory first put forward a decade ago: that sometimes for non-lethal illness, it pays for the immune system t stanley cup o not bother fighting. Because the immune system uses a lot of energy, so the theory goes, in days gone by it paid not to fight off infections if it could dangerously drain resources. While that might sounds crazy, simulations published in Evolution and Human Behavior seem to back it up entirely. As New Scientist describes: The model revealed that, in challenging environments, animals lived longer and sired more offspring if they endured infections without mounting an immune response. In more favorable environments, it was best for animals to mount an immune response and return to h stanley flask ealth as quic Stanley cup website kly as possible. Basically, then, the human body might not have shaken off a millenia-old adaptation that helped our bodies fight off infection selectively, depending on our environment and resources. Now we ;re all well-fed and full of energy, though, it seems the placebo effect may just remain as a quirk of nature. [Evolution and Human Behavior via New Scientist] Image by Trif/Shutterstock Kzxf Want to know which DC Comics superhero is coming out of the closet
Book trailers are usually pretty hit and miss, but these creeptastic trailers for Robison Wells ; Variant will draw you in 鈥?and then make you have to take a shower. Variant looks like the young-adult dystopian hotness, and we ;re excited to bring you an exclusive look at these disturbing book trailers. Check out two more below. If you ;ve been miss stanley cup ing the dystopian boarding school series Tower Prep as much as we have, then Variant may be just what you ;ve been waiting for. And it must be said, whoever made these book trailers had an eye for appalling weirdness. The horrible state of the headmaster fingernails is enough to give me nightmares. Here are two more trailers: In this riveting thriller with a sci-fi twist, 17-year-old Benson Fisher thought that a scholarship to the exclusive Maxfield Academy would be the chance of a lifetime. He was wrong. Now he trapped in a school that surrounded by a razor-wire f stanley uk ence, where video cameras monitor his every move. Where there are no adults, and the stu stanley mugs dents have divided into gangs to survive. And when Benson stumbles upon the real secret the school has been hiding, he realizes that escape may be impossible. In VARIANT, debut teen author Robison Wells combines pulse-pounding action and high-stakes suspense with characters that are hauntingly real. The result is a story that left James Dashner, the New York Times bestselling author of The Maze Runner, exclaiming I loved it! The twis
The placebo effect seems to make no sense: get mildly ill, take a dummy pill without knowing it ineffective, and you ;ll recover in much the same way as someone taking real drugs. But new evidence suggests that we might have evolved the placebo effect to save energy. New Scientist reports that new computer simulations seem to support an off-the-wall theory first put forward a decade ago: that sometimes for non-lethal illness, it pays for the immune system t stanley cup o not bother fighting. Because the immune system uses a lot of energy, so the theory goes, in days gone by it paid not to fight off infections if it could dangerously drain resources. While that might sounds crazy, simulations published in Evolution and Human Behavior seem to back it up entirely. As New Scientist describes: The model revealed that, in challenging environments, animals lived longer and sired more offspring if they endured infections without mounting an immune response. In more favorable environments, it was best for animals to mount an immune response and return to h stanley flask ealth as quic Stanley cup website kly as possible. Basically, then, the human body might not have shaken off a millenia-old adaptation that helped our bodies fight off infection selectively, depending on our environment and resources. Now we ;re all well-fed and full of energy, though, it seems the placebo effect may just remain as a quirk of nature. [Evolution and Human Behavior via New Scientist] Image by Trif/Shutterstock Kzxf Want to know which DC Comics superhero is coming out of the closet
Book trailers are usually pretty hit and miss, but these creeptastic trailers for Robison Wells ; Variant will draw you in 鈥?and then make you have to take a shower. Variant looks like the young-adult dystopian hotness, and we ;re excited to bring you an exclusive look at these disturbing book trailers. Check out two more below. If you ;ve been miss stanley cup ing the dystopian boarding school series Tower Prep as much as we have, then Variant may be just what you ;ve been waiting for. And it must be said, whoever made these book trailers had an eye for appalling weirdness. The horrible state of the headmaster fingernails is enough to give me nightmares. Here are two more trailers: In this riveting thriller with a sci-fi twist, 17-year-old Benson Fisher thought that a scholarship to the exclusive Maxfield Academy would be the chance of a lifetime. He was wrong. Now he trapped in a school that surrounded by a razor-wire f stanley uk ence, where video cameras monitor his every move. Where there are no adults, and the stu stanley mugs dents have divided into gangs to survive. And when Benson stumbles upon the real secret the school has been hiding, he realizes that escape may be impossible. In VARIANT, debut teen author Robison Wells combines pulse-pounding action and high-stakes suspense with characters that are hauntingly real. The result is a story that left James Dashner, the New York Times bestselling author of The Maze Runner, exclaiming I loved it! The twis