Ancient ear-wiggling muscles kick on when people strain to hear. That auricular activity, described January 30 in Frontiers in Neuroscience, probably doesn’t do much, if anything. But these ...
You are able to gift 5 more articles this month. Anyone can access the link you share with no account required. Learn more. In recent statements to the RSU 21 School Board, Tom Moyer (Kennebunk ...
New research explores the many ways our sensory experiences overlaps, teaching us new ways the brain perceives ...
As dauntingly separate from it as we have let ourselves become, we somehow retain an atavistic fascination with the animals we live among but rarely understand. Any reminder of what we’ve ...
London-based artist Frank Lloyd Wleft has enlisted Nina Winder-Lind of The New Eves for the new single, "How Did I Let Myself Fall So In Love With You?". “This is us going as straightforwardly country ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Spring Preview “Let Me Be Your Star,” which evokes an actor’s longing to shine, has come a long way from its TV days. Here’s how the song ...
The auricular muscles, which enabled our distant ancestors to move their ears for better hearing, activate when people try to ...
The Duke of Richmond talks about the exciting line up at this year's Festival of Speed. Danny Pike in the Morning weekdays from 0600 on BBC Radio Sussex. Be part of it…by texting 81333 (starting ...
Nina Sosanya Facing The Music is a new podcast offering a fresh perspective on the real life stories of some of classical music’s most established composers. Across ten episodes, well-known ...
"If the superior auricular muscles, the ones that perk the ears up, are activated, the hearing aid would know that the user is expending a lot of effort to hear and understand something," study co ...