📄 Extracted Text (2,378 words)
Paul Raeburn
Publications
BOOKS
Do Fathers Matter? What science is telling us about the parent we've overlooked
(Scientific American/Farrar, Straus and Giroux 2014).
Acquainted with the Night, a memoir of raising children with depression and bipolar
disorder (Broadway, 2004).
Mars: Uncovering the secrets of the red planet (National Geographic Society,
1998).
The Last Harvest: The genetic gamble that threatens to destroy American
agriculture (Simon & Schuster, 1995).
BLOGS
Knight Science Journalism Tracker (media criticism).
About Fathers (Psychology Today).
Buffington Post.
FREELANCE PUBLICATIONS
1. Discover, June, 2014. Genetic Battle of the Sexes.
2. Scientific American Mind, May 1, 2014. How Dads Influence Teens' Happiness.
3. Alfazeera America, April 9, 2014. Three-parent IVF is here, and there's nothing to fear.
4. Discover, June, 2013. Lying to Yourself Helps You Lie to Others.
5. Discover, March, 2013. A NASA Expert's Guide to Saturn.
6. Discover, September, 2012. Detect Alien Life on a Tight Budget.
7. Discover, July-August, 2012. This is What the Earth Will Look Like in 100,000,000 M.
8. Discover, June, 2012. Venus—The Wayward Planet Next Door.
9. Discover, March, 2012. New Revelations Shine Light on the Moon.
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10. Discover, January-February, 2012. New-Planet Boom Faces A Budget Bust.
11. The Huffington Post, May 25, 2011. How Two Teenagers Beat the Secret Service.
12. Discover, December, 2010. Lithium: The metal marvel that has mended brains for 50
years.
13. Scientific American Mind, February-March, 2009: The Father Factor: Could becoming a
father after age 40 raise the risks that your children could have a mental illness?
14. Scientific American, February, 2009. Chaos and the Catch of the Day.
15. Scientific American, September, 2007. Can Fat Be Fit?
16. Scientific American Mind, June, 2007. Kids on Meds—Trouble Ahead.
17. Child, June, 2007. Facing Differences—Growing up with facial abnormalities.
18. Self, October, 2006. The Stealthiest Cancers: Misdiagnosing breast cancer in young
women.
19. Scientific American, August, 2006. Slow-acting: After 25 years, the EPA still won't ban a
risky pesticide.
20. Scientific American, July, 2006. A regulation on regulations: An obscure law is evolving
into a bludgeon against government regulations.
21. The Nev York Times Magazine, May 28, 2006. Home Remedy: Forget boot camp. The
best way to help violent, troubled kids is to keep them in their habitat—and change it.
22. Psychology Today, June, 2006. A Case for Double-edged Optimism.
23. Scientific American, May, 2006. Legislating Integrity: A small attempt to prevent
political misuse of science.
24. Technology Review, December, 2005/January, 2006. MRI: A Window on the Brain.
25. The Nev York Times Magazine, December 4, 2005. Danger Signs: Can mental-health
checkups in schools combat teenage suicide?
26. A Field Guidefor Science Writers, October, 2005. Covering Mental Health.
27. The New York Times Magazine, August 14, 2005. A Second Womb.
28. The New York Times Magazine, February 20, 2005. The Therapeutic Mind Scan.
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29. En busqueda de un lenguaje comun, National Academy of Sciences, Buenos Aires,
Argentina, 2004. Scientific and Technical Journalism.
30. Health, December, 2004. Decisions, Decisions: Overwhelmed by too many options?
31. Health Affairs, November/December, 2004. Acquainted with the Night. Reprinted in
Narrative Matters: The Power of the Personal Essay in Health Policy, ed. by Fitzhugh
Mullan, M.D. et. al. (The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2006).
32. The New York Times Magazine, October 17, 2004. Too Immature for the Death Penalty?
33. USA Today, September 15, 2004. A Childhood Epidemic We Can No Longer Ignore.
34. Psychology Today, September, 2004. The Pill Paradox: Are antidepressants killing teens,
or saving their lives?
35. The Washington Post, June 13, 2004. Review of Secrets of the Soul, by Eli
Zaretsky.
36. Morning Edition, National Public Radio, May 6, 2004. Commentary:
Antidepressants and Children.
37. The New York Times Book Review, February 8, 2004. Review of Out of Gas, by
David Goodstein.
38. Child, May, 2003. The Mystifying Mood Disorder: Can young children be
bipolar?
39. Morning Edition, National Public Radio, December 4, 2002. Commentary:
Testing Children's Drugs.
40. The New York Times Book Review, August 25, 2002. Review of Of Moths and Men, by
Judith Hooper.
41. The New York Times Book Review, December 16, 2001. Review of What
Evolution Is, by Ernst Mayr.
42. Scientific American, October, 2001. Review of Hubbert's Peak: The Impending
World Oil Shortage, by Kenneth S. Deffeyes.
43. Morning Edition, National Public Radio, September 24, 2001. Commentary:
Another suggestion for rebuilding the World Trade Center site.
44. The New York Times Book Review, April 29, 2001. Review of Promiscuity, An
Evolutionary History of Sperm Competition, by Tim Birkhead.
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45. Morning Edition, National Public Radio, April II, 2001. Commentary: Business
Altruism.
46. Morning Edition, National Public Radio, August 23, 2000. Commentary: Making
cars with fins.
47. Morning Edition, National Public Radio, July 12, 2000. Commentary: Finding a
cure for cancer.
48. Morning Edition, National Public Radio, May 19, 2000. Commentary: Napster.
49. Morning Edition, National Public Radio, March 31, 2000. Commentary:
NASA's exploration of Mars.
50. Popular Science, January, 2000. Will Humans Survive to the Next Millennium?
51. The New York Times Book Review, October 24, 1999. Review of Reclaiming the
Commons: Community Farms & Forests in a New England Town, by Brian
Donahue.
52. Popular Science, February, 1999. Next Stop: Mars-NASA's bold plan for
living on the red planet (cover story).
53. The New York Times Book Review, January 10, 1999. Review of What Remains
to be Discovered: Mapping the Secrets of the Universe, The Origins of Life, and
the Future of the Human Race, by John Maddox.
54. The New York Times, Sunday Arts & Leisure section, October 25, 1998. Just
Like the Old Days, Except for the dot-corn (Radio drama on the Internet).
55. The New York Times Book Review, June 28, 1998. Review of The Ecology of
Eden, by Evan Eisenberg.
56. The New York Times Book Review, January 11, 1998. Review of Remaking
Eden: Cloning and Beyond in a Brave New World, by Lee M. Silver.
57. Glamour, August, 1996. Diet Pills: They're back. Are they any better?
58. Popular Science, May, 1996. The Last Harvest, excerpted from The Last
Harvest: The Genetic Gamble that Threatens to Destroy American Agriculture,
(Simon & Schuster, 1995).
59. Washington Post, Dec. 6, 1995. Seeds of Security (Op-Ed page).
60. Allure, February, 1995. Allergic to Food.
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61. Glamour, February, 1995. Medical Report: The Female Condom.
62. Allure, July, 1994. Faith and Vitamins: The latest study says vitamins aren't sure-
fire cures. But that's not the end of the debate.
63. Allure, April, 1994. New Hope for Herpes: Scientists are closing in on an
antiviral cream that may really cure cold sores.
64. Allure, January, 1994. About that Thigh Cream: The news about a cream that
reduced thighs spread faster than good gossip. But was it too good to be true?
Reprinted in Femina. May, 1994, Cape Town, South Africa.
65. Popular Science, June, 1994. Can This Man Save Our Forests? The Forest
Service explores new strategies for managing public lands.
66. Technology Review, November/December, 1993. Reverse Engineering the
Human Brain.
67. Popular Science, October, 1992. Earth Summit Accord.
68. Diversity, Volume 8, Number 2, 1992. The Convention on Biological Diversity:
Landmark Earth Summit Pact.
69. American Health, March, 1992. Dollars and Sense: The nation's health care costs
are out of control. But here's how you can buck the trend.
70. Business Week, December 30, 1991/January 6, 1992. Tomorrow's Technologies.
71. Buzzworyn, March/April, 1991. Adventures in the Skin Trade.
72. American Health, January-February, 1991. Unforbidden Fruit.
73. Health and You, Summer, 1990. The Simple Secret of Fitness: Move.
74. The New York Times, May 20, 1990. A Troubadour For Troubled Folk: Michael
Smith's score for "The Grapes of Wrath" has made the songwriter a sudden
success.
75. France 1990, published by Bantam Books, Spring, 1990. Normandy, Brittany
and the North.
76. American Health, March, 1990. The Switched-On House: Concern grows about
electromagnetic fields and household devices.
77. Health and You, Spring, 1990. Passive Pollution.
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78. American Health, January/Februaty, 1990. The Great Cholesterol Debate.
79. Issues in Science and Technology, Winter, 1989-1990. Seeds of Despair: A quiet
crisis at America's seed banks could eventually compromise the food supply and
increase vulnerability to global warming.
80. Health and You, Winter, 1989-1990. Tragedy Hits the Brake.
81. Health and You, Fall, 1989. Smoke Gets In Your Eyes.
82. World Bank Annual Meeting News, September, 1989. Conable Continues Push
For New Environmental Measures.
83. The Scientist, April 3, 1989. Monsanto and Soviets Join in Biotech Pact.
84. World Book Yearbook, 1989. Physics.
85. Health and You, Spring, 1989. Poly Who? For a country that talks so much about
fats and oils, we sure don't know much about them.
86. Health and You, Spring, 1989. Like Parent, Like Child? Just how important is
heredity in matters of the heart?
87. The Scientist, December 26, 1988. Biotherapeutics: Expensive Scam or Equal
Opportunity?
88. McCall's, September, 1988. The Headache Handbook: A guide to the latest
information on causes and treatments.
89. National Wildlife, August-September, 1988. Ancient Survivor: The Chambered
Nautilus.
90. The Scientist, June 27, 1988. Manage of Innovate? One Man's Solutions to a
Classic Quandary.
91. Omni, February, 1988. Stiff Sentence.
92. World Book Yearbook, 1988. Physics.
93. National Wildlife, December-January, 1988. Can Dogfish Cure Diabetes?
94. American Health, December, 1987. Eater's High.
95. American Health, July/August, 1987. The Stone-Age Diet.
96. MD Magazine, April, 1986. The Physics of Dance.
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97. Science 85, December, 1985. The Houdini Virus.
98. High Technology, December, 1985. Automating America's Heartland.
99. MD Magazine, June, 1985. Gene Mapping: Medicine's Last Frontier.
100. High Technology, May, 1985. Helping Crops Stand Up To Salt.
101. High Technology, April, 1985. Multipurpose Vaccines: A single shot may soon
protect against several diseases.
102. MD Magazine, February, 1985. Tucson: The Astronomy Capital of the World.
103. MD Magazine, November, 1984. The Growth Problems of Growth Hormone.
104. Omni, September, 1984. Explorations: Seal Survivors.
105. MD Magazine, November, 1983. Searching for the Lost Chord: Saxophonist
Sonny Rollins.
106. Science 83, June, 1983. An Uncommon Chimp: The beguiling pygmy
chimpanzee.
107. Boston Magazine, May, 1983. The Spies Who Came In From The Code: A
foolproof code to prevent computer theft.
108. Technology Review, November-December, 1982. Revamping Drug Approval.
109. The Boston Phoenix, November 13, 1979. Reeling in the West: Inside
Bedford's BASF Factory.
110. The Boston Phoenix, October 23, 1979. Hey, Look at Us: The future of video
demos.
III. The Boston Phoenix, September 25, 1979. Introducing Home Computers: What
they can and can't do.
112. The Boston Phoenix, September 4, 1979. How to Get Your Own Satellite Earth
Station: And Receive "South Pacific" From the South Pacific.
113. The Boston Phoenix, September 4, 1979. Introducing the encoded disc system:
Dbx brings noise reduction to the world of vinyl.
114. The Boston Phoenix, August 28, 1979. Aw, Shucks: A look at the art of prying
clams out of their natural packaging.
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115. The Boston Phoenix, July 24, 1979. Private Lightning Strike It Rich: Even
meteoric rises represent a lot of hard work.
116. The Boston Phoenix, May 22, 1979. Fred Buda, Drums and Butter: Jazzman,
classicist and teacher preaches the virtues of versatility.
117. The Boston Phoenix, May 15, 1979. After the aftermarket: The cost of
installation.
118. The Boston Phoenix, May 15, 1979. Time delay for your car system.
119. The Boston Phoenix, April 3, 1979. Any Number Can Play: Major studios try
3M's digital technology.
120. The Boston Phoenix, April 3, 1979. After the masters: Audiophile pop.
121. The Boston Phoenix, April 3, 1979. Planning Ahead for the Digital Age: AR
wonders if today's speakers can handle tomorrow's sounds.
122. The Boston Phoenix, March 27, 1979. Getting with the Program: Jobs in the
computer industry.
123. The Boston Phoenix, February 27, 1979. Tin Pan Technology: MIT's computer
aids for composers.
124. The Boston Phoenix, February 20, 1979. Changing Customs: Our bodies, our
cars.
125. The Boston Phoenix, February 6, 1979. The Boston Symphony Orchestra:
Monitoring the latest DG recording.
126. The Boston Phoenix, December 12, 1978. A Tree with All the Trimmings: A
short history of holiday decorations.
127. The Boston Phoenix, December 12, 1978. Look into My Skies: Still following
yonder star.
128. The Boston Phoenix, December 5, 1978. The Ultimate Living Room: the
marriage of audio and video.
129. The Boston Phoenix, December 5, 1978. What's Kloss Up to Now? The latest
video innovation.
130. The Boston Phoenix, November 7, 1978. Steering Clear of Bad FM Stereo
Reception: Why your car radio doesn't sound as good as it should.
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131. The Boston Phoenix, October 24, 1978. Digits by the Score: Playing the
numbers, the Roland MC-8 microcomposer.
132. The Boston Phoenix, October 3, 1978. Digital Editing, Bit by Bit: The industry
scrambles to develop a standard for mixing digitally encoded tapes.
133. The Boston Phoenix, September 26, 1978. Round and Round, How Much
Better Are Radials? Some basic advice about choosing your next set of tires.
134. The Boston Phoenix, September 5, 1978. Sight and Sound: Simulcasting is
proving to be worth the headache.
135. The Boston Phoenix, September 5, 1978. Getting Better All the Time: A report
on the FCC and AT&T.
136. The Boston Phoenix, August 22, 1978. Taking Advantage of Higher Education:
A guide to tuition-free university resources.
137. The Boston Phoenix, August 8, 1978. Fenway Studios, The Art of Living: How
they rescued Boston's historic artists' roost.
138. The Boston Phoenix, July 18, 1978. Boston Jazz: Some local talent talks about
survival north of Manhattan.
139. The Boston Phoenix, June 20, 1978. Musseling in by the Beautiful Sea: A look
at New England's neglected shellfish, the mussel.
140. The Boston Phoenix, June 20, 1978. Riding the Rails in New England.
141. Tufts Criterion, June, 1978. Beyond Atomic Theory.
142. The Boston Phoenix, May 16, 1978. Can't You Practice Someplace Else? Notes
on the plight of the tenant-musician.
143. Technology Review, May, 1978. Vox Machina: The music of the machine.
144. The Boston Phoenix, May 9, 1978. Two by Two: Tom Stockham and digital
recording.
145. The Boston Phoenix, May 9, 1978. Choosing Your Back Seat Drivers: What to
consider when shopping for car speakers.
146. Columbia Today, Winter, 1977. I.I. Rabi, Scientist-Statesman.
147. Science Digest, July, 1977. Nuclear Fusion's Promise Grows.
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148. Columbia Today, March, 1977. Working Toward the Fusion Age.
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ℹ️ Document Details
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190480a006ad6b0d1f627e905e1af3348fcce86fb77cc535f410b4740d1d93cc
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EFTA01201460
Dataset
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Pages
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