Working on a Mother’s Day card for mom. Shh! Don’t tell her. #nofilter (Taken with instagram)

Working on a Mother’s Day card for mom. Shh! Don’t tell her. #nofilter (Taken with instagram)

@3 weeks ago
#nofilter 

melissacooke:

“Washed Out”, graphite on paper, 50” x 50”
by Melissa Cooke

(via suicideblonde)

@1 month ago with 3483 notes

"‘Thursday the 12th’ is just as rare as “Friday the 13th.’"

Neil deGrasse Tyson (via lionskeleton)
@1 month ago with 264 notes
thedailyfeed:

Aw! Some meanie tried to abandon six English bulldog puppies and their mother by zipping them inside a suitcase and leaving it outside a business in Toledo, Ohio. But he left his ID. 

thedailyfeed:

Aw! Some meanie tried to abandon six English bulldog puppies and their mother by zipping them inside a suitcase and leaving it outside a business in Toledo, Ohio. But he left his ID

@1 month ago with 105 notes
thisisnailporn:

Flyest MTV Nailset ever…..has @MTVSTYLE seen this?

thisisnailporn:

Flyest MTV Nailset ever…..has @MTVSTYLE seen this?

@1 month ago with 184 notes

Ephemeral Portraits Cut from Layers of Wire Mesh by Seung Mo Park | Colossal 

@1 month ago
newsweek:

You go, mo.

newsweek:

You go, mo.

@1 month ago with 376 notes
discoverynews:

Baboons Can Recognize Words
Baboons can learn to tell the difference between real four-letter words and nonsense combinations of letters. And once they figure out the patterns, these monkeys can guess with impressive accuracy whether a new word is real or fake.
Because baboons can’t actually read, a new study supports the theory that the brains of our primate ancestors held the necessary hardware for understanding written words long before humans evolved. Only after we starting writing and reading about 5,400 years or so did we apply our object-recognition abilities to letter symbols.
By the end of the training period, which included about 50,000 trials for each animal, all of the baboons had learned to recognize at least 81 words at an accuracy rate of about 75 percent, the researchers report today in the journal Science. One animal learned more than 300 words.
keep reading
image: Baboon eyes, Corbis

discoverynews:

Baboons Can Recognize Words

Baboons can learn to tell the difference between real four-letter words and nonsense combinations of letters. And once they figure out the patterns, these monkeys can guess with impressive accuracy whether a new word is real or fake.

Because baboons can’t actually read, a new study supports the theory that the brains of our primate ancestors held the necessary hardware for understanding written words long before humans evolved. Only after we starting writing and reading about 5,400 years or so did we apply our object-recognition abilities to letter symbols.

By the end of the training period, which included about 50,000 trials for each animal, all of the baboons had learned to recognize at least 81 words at an accuracy rate of about 75 percent, the researchers report today in the journal Science. One animal learned more than 300 words.

keep reading

image: Baboon eyes, Corbis

@1 month ago with 426 notes
urhajos:

‘Lawn of The Dead’ by Anna-Maria Jung

urhajos:

Lawn of The Dead’ by Anna-Maria Jung

@1 month ago with 265 notes
magicfran:

Alice Duke
@1 month ago with 62 notes