The Brutalist Report - sciencedaily
- Does this ring a bell? Wild bats can remember sounds for years [1350d]
- Evolving to outpace climate change, tiny marine animal provides new evidence of long-theorized genetic mechanism [1350d]
- Cats injured in wildfires at risk of deadly blood clots [1350d]
- California's trees are dying, and might not be coming back [1350d]
- One-hit wonder: How awards, recognition decrease inventors' creativity [1350d]
- New anticoagulant platform, offering hope for advances for heart surgery, dialysis, other procedures [1350d]
- Epo does not help with neurological damage to newborns [1350d]
- Music-making and the flow of aerosols [1350d]
- A newly identified stem cell regulator enables lifelong sperm production [1350d]
- Wireless activation of targeted brain circuits in less than one second [1350d]
- A new treatment approach for cystic fibrosis [1350d]
- Link between air pollution and child brain development strengthened [1350d]
- Bacteria in donor organs complicate immune response after transplantation [1350d]
- Using AI to diagnose birth defect in fetal ultrasound images [1350d]
- Geological activity can rapidly change deep microbial communities [1350d]
- Moderate drinking linked to brain changes and cognitive decline [1350d]
- Research probes how people control unwanted thoughts [1350d]
- Researchers develop better model to study brain-attacking viruses [1350d]
- Loss of male sex chromosome leads to earlier death for men [1350d]
- Sentences have their own timing in the brain [1350d]
- Consider farmers at individual level when controlling livestock disease outbreaks [1350d]
- Scientists find primitive blueprint for embryo cell creation [1350d]
- Women already live longer. They can live better with an improved diet [1350d]
- Neutrino factories in deep outer space [1350d]
- Researchers learn to control electron spin at room temperature to make devices more efficient and faster [1350d]
- Most complex protein knots [1350d]
- People with low BMI aren't more active, they are just less hungry and 'run hotter' [1350d]
- DNA from ancient population in Southern China suggests Native Americans' East Asian roots [1350d]
- 'Life-like' lasers can self-organize, adapt their structure, and cooperate [1350d]
- Trade deals and changing diets key influencers in securing nutrient rich food [1350d]
- Eco-friendly sound absorbers from seaweed [1350d]
- Woodpeckers' heads act more like stiff hammers than safety helmets [1350d]
- North American birds not fully adjusting to changing climate [1350d]
- Researchers discover DNA copy number alterations lead to changes in RNA circuits that impact melanoma metastasis [1350d]
- Scientists develop new method and device to isolate single cells using electric fields [1350d]
- A type of 'step therapy' is an effective strategy for diabetic eye disease [1350d]
- Could eating fruit more often keep depression at bay? [1350d]
- Coastal glacier retreat linked to climate change [1350d]
- Novel model of fluid distribution in the Cascadia Subduction Zone aids understanding of seismic activity [1350d]
- As globe warms, infected pines starve and disease-causing fungi thrive [1350d]
- Nanotube-embedded coating detects threats from wear and tear in large structures [1350d]
- Simple skin biopsy can assess tissue damage related to COVID-19 [1350d]
- Brentuximab vedotin may improve overall survival in patients with Hodgkin Lymphoma [1350d]
- Individualized eating program helps dieters lose weight, keep it off [1350d]
- A new peptide system for the targeted transport of molecules into living mammalian cells [1350d]
- Established drug for symptoms of angina pectoris also protects vascular system, study finds [1350d]
- Changes in protein structure and assembly with fluoride nanoparticles and coexisting ions [1350d]
- Photovoltaics: Fully scalable all-perovskite tandem solar modules [1350d]
- Stress transmitter wakes your brain more than 100 times a night -- and it is perfectly normal [1350d]
- A brain network for social attraction [1350d]
- Waves in the maze of no return: Anti-reflective structure for perfect transmission [1350d]
- Risk factors in adults with cardiovascular disease are worsening over time despite advances in secondary prevention, study shows [1350d]
- Action of drug compounds in tissue revealed by new technique [1350d]
- Researchers create highly accurate non-invasive test for major liver diseases [1350d]
- Professional soccer players fought fatigue for six weeks after COVID infection, study finds [1350d]
- C. difficile drives some colorectal cancers, study suggests [1351d]
- Virtual reality app trial shown to reduce common phobias [1351d]
- Genetic discovery to improve lung cancer treatment [1351d]
- Researchers capture the first example of an extremely bright, and fast-evolving astronomical event in the distant universe [1351d]
- Consumer product-related traumatic brain injury in children has increased significantly since 2000, study finds [1351d]
- Take the burn out of sunscreen testing: Experts [1351d]
- For people with heart defects, mental health support is essential to care at every age [1351d]
- Where and when violent crime rates fall, heart disease deaths fall, too [1351d]
- Not enough men in their 40s are getting screened for diabetes, study finds [1351d]
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