Fetching Felines
Mary Bates Mary Bates

Fetching Felines

Does your cat play fetch? A new survey suggests the behavior might not be uncommon, but also that each cat may have their own individual play preferences.

Read more at my Animal Minds blog: Cats Play Fetch, Too.

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Dolphins’ Electric Sense
Mary Bates Mary Bates

Dolphins’ Electric Sense

Even buried in the ocean floor, fish may not stand a chance against a hungry bottlenose dolphin. Dolphins have keen vision, an exceptional sense of hearing—and they can sense electric fields emitted by their prey, according to new research.

Researchers at Nuremberg Zoo and University of Rostock, Germany teamed up to find out just how sensitive these marine mammals are to electric fields. The results may explain how dolphins detect hidden fish at close range and even provide clues as to why the animals sometimes strand themselves on beaches.

Read the whole story at my Animal Minds blog: Bottlenose Dolphins Sense Electricity.

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Sex Bias in Research
Mary Bates Mary Bates

Sex Bias in Research

The lack of female representation in preclinical biomedical research has resulted in gaps in our medical knowledge, with important consequences for women’s health. In the past decade, efforts to remedy this historic exclusion have increased, but opportunities remain to make basic biomedical research more equitable, reproducible, and applicable to all people.

Read my latest article for IEEE Pulse: Considering Sex in Biomedical Research.

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Puzzle-Solving Caracaras
Mary Bates Mary Bates

Puzzle-Solving Caracaras

Striated caracaras, members of the falcon family native to the south Atlantic, are known for their curiosity and playfulness. How do these “feathered monkeys” stack up against tool-using parrots on tests of problem-solving?

Read more at my Animal Minds blog: Meet the Falcons That Act Like Parrots.

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