New research found confined and isolating environments changed the way people smelled and responded emotionally to certain food aromas. The team in this study compared 44 people's emotional responses and perception of eight food aromas in two environmental scenarios: sitting in reclined chairs that mimic astronauts' posture in microgravity; and then in the confined setting of the International Space Station (ISS), which was simulated for participants with virtual reality goggles. The research builds on previous work by the team and aims to help explain why astronauts report meals taste different in space and struggle to eat their normal nutritional intake over long missions, which has been reported in the news recently.
source https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/11/241118125523.htm
Recovering in-demand metals for new electronics—researchers find
industrial-strength adsorbents soak up lanthanum
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Nearly all technology today—from cellphones to computers to MRI
scanners—contains rare earth elements (REEs). The global market for REEs is
predicted to re...
6 hours ago
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