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Ronan, a sea lion at UC Santa Cruz, outperforms humans in keeping a beat, challenging long-held beliefs about rhythm ...
It takes a human, on average, 150 milliseconds to blink. I’m telling you this because Ronan proved herself capable of hitting the beat within an average range of 15 milliseconds, meaning she only ...
A feel for the groove isn't restricted to humans, but it does seem pretty limited across the animal kingdom. Chimpanzees can keep a beat, but their ability to do so is low compared to Homo sapiens.
For years, scientists believed that rhythm was a skill exclusively reserved to humans, out of all mammals. But a rescue sea ...
Ronan, the only non-human mammal to demonstrate highly precise beat keeping, continues to challenge our understanding of ...
Ronan was slightly more variable beat to beat than adult humans. She also tended to hit ahead of the beat when listening to ...
O.C. Spring Block Party: The Ocean City Spring Block Party will return to downtown Asbury Avenue from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
American businesses are cancelling orders from China, postponing expansion plans and hunkering down to see what trade policy ...
AirCo turns CO2 into fuels, and a new concept store in New York City highlights all the types of travel the company aims to ...
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