Traveling. But here's what I'm reading during train, plane, and bus rides -- and over meals:
Gravity-defying ramps take illusion prize. This contest always produces fascinating stuff. This time, the ball rolls up. Video here.

Vaughan Bell ponders cortisol, dopamine, neuroplasticity, and other things that set off his bullshit detector. Riff launched from a post from Neuroskeptic on cortisol and childcare scare stories, equally read-worthy.
Dan Vorhaus does a wonderful round-up of reactions and implications stemming from the news that genetic testing is coming to Walgreens. Best blog-post title cited there: "Chapter 38 of the Sky is Falling," a fine post by genomeboy Misha Angrist.
From Mark Bittman's blog, Suzanne Lenzer On Eating Alone. Particularly appropriate while traveling. And while I wish I were sharing these meals with my better half, I'm with Lenzer and Stephen B. Johnson in taking a real pleasure in eating good food while reading a good book:
Last night it was gnochhi and *The Selfish Gene. *(On which more another time.)
In Illuminating the brain, Lizzie Buchen reports on the growing use of light to turn different brain areas on and off. This carries significant potential as a cleaner, safer, easier, even more flexible replacement for the sort of deep brain stimulation (DBS) modulators used to treat Parkinson's and in Mayberg et alia's experimental depression treatment discussed in yesterday's post.
Paul Broks on 150 years of Sigmund Freud Some useful reminders.
And via Vaughan Bell's most recent weekly round-up,