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Are you looking for a hands-on way to teach your little ones about the human body? This fun Human Body Sensory Bin is a ...
Our human evolution workshops were conducted with well-resourced and historically disadvantaged schools attending. The grade ...
Inspired by nature, scientists created a self-powered device that recognizes color just like our eyes, paving the way for advanced machine vision.
NASA’s Perseverance rover has detected the first aurora at Mars that’s visible to the human eye, good news for future astronauts who can savor the view on the red planet.
Scientists at the University of California, Berkeley, who have witnessed the new color they dubbed "olo" described it as a deep, rich blue-greenish hue that can't be seen with the naked human eye.
A new retinal stimulation technique called Oz enabled volunteers to see colours that lie beyond the natural range of human vision. Developed by researchers at UC Berkeley, Oz works by stimulating ...
In a study published in Science Advances on April 18, a group of five researchers stimulated retina cells in participants' eyes, who, afterwards, claimed to have seen a color no human has seen before.
As per the research, the colour is said to be the saturated shade of blue-green. It cannot be seen by the naked eye without stimulating specific cells in the retina.
According to them, what is so peculiar about this colour is that the hue’s intensity, or ‘saturation’, goes far away from the natural range of colours which the human eye has seen. The research was ...
Correction 22 April 2025 Brand-new colour created by tricking human eyes with laser The ‘off-the-charts saturated’ greenish hue — called olo — has been seen by only five study participants.
This discovery has shed light on the genetic mutation responsible for blue eyes, offering remarkable insights into human evolution. Eye colour is determined by the amount of melanin, a pigment, in ...
As we get older, the vitreous — the gel-like fluid that fills human eyeballs and maintains their rounded shapes — shrinks away from the retina, which sometimes causes a tear in the macula.