Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
These Monkeys Learned to Tap to the Beat of the Backstreet Boys. Can They Teach Researchers About the Origins of Human Musicality?
Two macaques learned to keep time with various songs, which might point to how humans got their sense of rhythm. But some ...
Writing by hand engages more of the brain than typing. Scientists say the cognitive demands of handwriting may help keep the ...
“Based on their training data, they just model the probability that a given token, or word, will follow a set of tokens that ...
One could look at the charts this morning and start wondering if they’ve seen this movie before. After reclaiming the $91k ...
A deep strain is running through hospitals around the country. There are not enough surgeons, and the shortage is growing.
Most online life now runs on text. A teacher opens a late-night essay submission that sounds nothing like a student’s past ...
The AI revolution will be won by products designed from the ground up around user needs, not just the capabilities of the ...
Buying learning technologies for technology's sake helps no one--not students, not faculty, and certainly not higher ed institutional outcomes ...
In a world dominated by keyboards and text messages, the simple act of writing by hand has become an often-overlooked ...
The Zen Parent on MSNOpinion
The case against standardized testing: What it really does to kids' learning
Standardized tests claim to measure student learning, academic achievement, and college readiness. What they actually measure ...
In the world of early childhood education, few pedagogical tools are as universally effective as music and movement activities for babies. Long before formal instruction begins, rhythm and sound form ...
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