Press your fingers into the back of your skull, just above your neck. If you feel a small spike you may be among people whose body has responded to smartphone use by growing new layers of bone. 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 ...
SYDNEY — 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.
Young People Are Growing Small Horns on Back of Their Skulls Because of Phone Use, Research Suggests
This is an archived article and the information in the article may be outdated. Please look at the time stamp on the story to see when it was last updated. It sounds like a crazy tabloid ...
In brief: Researchers at the University of the Sunshine Coast in Queensland, Australia, have come up with an intriguing discovering that has to do with bone growth in skulls of younger adults (aged 18 ...
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 ...
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