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Kecia Lynn
Kecia Lynn has worked as a technical writer, editor, software developer, arts administrator, summer camp director, and television host. A graduate of Case Western Reserve University and the Iowa Writers' Workshop, she is currently living in Iowa City and working on her first novel.
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New research demonstrates that infants as young as eight months old understand that if an object is moving and appears to be in control of its movements, then it's got something inside it that's helping it to move.
Nissan's Nismo smartwatch gives new meaning to the car/driver relationship: It connects to the car's computer system so that its wearer can receive performance data and other information.
Disney Research's Ishin-Den-Shin -- Japanese for "what the mind thinks, the heart transmits" -- converts recorded audio into a signal that passes from person to person through simple touch.
Cree's version is the first to pass California standards for performance and cost and, hopefully, the average consumer's standards for appearance.
Coating one of the toughest and most flexible materials in nature with carbon nanotubes results in a stretchy yet conductive hybrid that could be incorporated into different kinds of medical sensors.
The microbes and enzymes in pandas' digestive systems have a unique ability to break down plant waste. Collecting it from the animals' feces could lead to faster and cheaper biofuel production.
It's the first time such conspicuous planning has been observed in the field -- in this case, Sumatra -- among non-human primates.