Discover Magazine. Science, Technology and The Future
  • Log In
  • Subscribe
  • Give a Gift
  • Archives
  • Customer Service
  • Health & Medicine
  • Mind & Brain
  • Technology
  • Space
  • Human Origins
  • Living World
  • Environment
  • Physics & Math
  • Video
  • Photos
  • Podcast
  • RSS

NeuroQuest

by Eric Haseltine

published online April 1, 2001


Email Print Rss Increase - Decrease Font SizeIncrease - Decrease Font SizeIncrease - Decrease Font Size
Latest News Blogs Most Popular
  • How Your Brain Can Control Time
  • 3 Robots That Move Just Like Animals
  • Each Grain of Sand a Tiny Work of Art
  • The World's Largest Dump: The Great Pacific Garbage Patch
  • Jaron's World: Sex, Drugs, and the Internet
  • 3 Ideas That Are Pushing the Edge of Science
  • The Blind Climber Who "Sees" With His Tongue
  • 20 Things You Didn't Know About... Oil
  • Astronomers Discover the First Ring Around a Moon
  • What Does Alzheimer's Look Like in Your Brain?
  • Quantum Quest - Potentially Awesome?
  • My Comic Con panel: LIVE
  • Die Greener
  • Comic Con - John Barrowman Rocks
  • Is a Mathematical Formula Spelling Stock Market Doom?
  • Comic Con, Day 1: Doctor Who panel
  • The Other Battlestar
  • Brotherton on Crichton
  • Siamese Swallows in Arkansas? Not So Fast, Expert Says
  • Historians Foretell Our Demise as a Scientific Superpower
  • Distant Turbulence in the Magnetic Field Triggers the Northern Lights
  • Remembering Victor McKusick, the Father of Medical Genetics
  • The Arctic Holds 90 Billion Barrels of Oil, Geologists Say
  • Cancer Doctor Issues a Warning About Cell Phones, and Causes Panic
  • Nanotubes Could Provide the Key to Flexible Electronics
  • Parasitic Worms May Increase Vulnerabilty to the HIV Virus
  • A Solar Power Plant in the Sahara Could Power All of Europe
  • Prostate Cancer Drug Shows Promise for “Untreatable” Patients
  • Fossils of Shrimp-Like Creatures Point to a Warmer Antarctica in the ...
  • Viagra Helps Women Combat the Sexual Side Effects of Antidepressants
Monthly Newsletter Sign-Up
  • Health & Medicine
  • Mind & Brain
  • Technology
  • Space
  • Human Origins
  • Living World
  • Environment
  • Physics & Math
  • General Newsletter
Subscribe to the Magazine










If you live outside of the US & Canada, CLICK HERE

DISCOVER Poll
When Will Science Fiction Become Science Fact?

At Comic-Con 2008, DISCOVER's Science Not Fiction blog is hosting a panel about how science fiction relates to science.

For readers who won't be making it to Comic-Con, here's a question: Which of these visionary sci-fi technologies will be realized first?


Privacy - Terms - Customer Service - Subscribe Today - Advertise - About Us