AUSTRALIA -- It sounds like a crazy tabloid headline—humans are growing little horns in the back of their skulls. Except it comes not from a tabloid but a peer-reviewed study in Scientific Reports.
Yikes – this may be a good incentive to put down your phone a little more often. Australian researchers have found evidence linking one’s frequent use of mobile devices to altering physiology.
Multiple reports suggest our reliance on phones may be causing us to grow weird horns in the back of our head. But that's not the case. Jackson Ryan was CNET's science editor, and a multiple ...
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready... Updated June 25, 2019 at 11:21 a.m. After publication of this Washington Post story, concerns were raised about an undisclosed business venture of one of the ...
It sounds like a crazy tabloid headline—humans are growing little horns in the back of their skulls. Except it comes not from a tabloid but a peer-reviewed study in Scientific Reports. Australian ...
It sounds like a crazy tabloid headline—humans are growing little horns in the back of their skulls. Except it comes not from a tabloid but a peer-reviewed study in Scientific Reports. Australian ...