The Brutalist Report - sciencedaily
- Although tiny, peatland microorganisms have a big impact on climate [535d]
- Risk of long COVID declined over course of pandemic [535d]
- The courtship of leopard seals off the coast of South America [535d]
- Improving HIV treatment in children and adolescents -- the right way [535d]
- Singing the science: Using karaoke to examine blushing [535d]
- Does the type of workstation you use make a difference in your health and productivity? [535d]
- Microbes found to destroy certain 'forever chemicals' [535d]
- Autoantibodies behind lifelong risk of viral infections [535d]
- Sea ice's cooling power is waning faster than its area of extent [535d]
- New technique could help treat aggressive brain tumors [535d]
- Evidence for butchery of giant armadillo-like mammals in Argentina 21,000 years ago [535d]
- Gender inequality across US states revealed by new tool [535d]
- Mental health training for line managers linked to better business performance in England [535d]
- New antidote for cobra bites discovered [535d]
- Ant insights lead to robot navigation breakthrough [535d]
- Soft, stretchy 'jelly batteries' inspired by electric eels [535d]
- The most endangered fish are the least studied [535d]
- Mindfulness training may lead to altered states of consciousness [535d]
- New technique pinpoints nanoscale 'hot spots' in electronics to improve their longevity [535d]
- Ancient viruses fuel modern-day cancers [535d]
- Reef pest feasts on 'sea sawdust' [535d]
- Diatom surprise could rewrite the global carbon cycle [535d]
- Discovery of a hybrid lineage offers clues to how trees adapt to climate change [535d]
- Research tracks 66 million years of mammalian diversity [535d]
- Want to spot a deepfake? Look for the stars in their eyes [535d]
- Ultra-processed food makes up almost two-thirds of calorie intake of UK adolescents, study finds [535d]
- Aussie innovation spearheads cheaper seafloor test for offshore wind farms [535d]
- The eyes have it: Visual inspection experience essential for airport security screening [535d]
- A hydrogel implant to treat endometriosis [535d]
- Paleolithic diets are not without risks [535d]
- New analgesic could replace opioids over the long term [535d]
- Children living in greener neighborhoods show better lung function [535d]
- Powerful new particle accelerator a step closer with muon-marshalling technology [535d]
- Physicists develop new theory describing the energy landscape formed when quantum particles gather together [535d]
- Boost in infant genetics research could change lives, say researchers [535d]
- Improving identification of human remains using craniofacial superimposition [535d]
- Designing safer opioids [535d]
- Completely stretchy lithium-ion battery for flexible electronics [535d]
- Stress-related cell damage linked to negative mental and physical health effects among caregivers [535d]
- What fat cats on a diet may tell us about obesity in humans [535d]
- Patients with Alzheimer's disease have higher frequency of mental health symptoms which can precede memory problems, study finds [535d]
- Researchers predict fewer, pricier strawberries as temperatures warm [535d]
- Smart soil can water and feed itself [535d]
- Study uncovers genetic cancer risks in 550 patients [535d]
- Scientists define new type of memory loss in older adults [535d]
- Diabetes drug reduces drug resistance in lung cancer, improving chemotherapy effectiveness [535d]
- Cell donor's socioeconomic status shapes cancer treatment outcomes, new study finds [535d]
- Multiple moves during childhood can increase the risks of depression in later life [535d]
- Cuttlefish can form false memories, too [535d]
- Astronomers spot a 'highly eccentric' planet on its way to becoming a hot Jupiter [535d]
- Psilocybin generates psychedelic experience by disrupting brain network [535d]
- Electronic prompt for surgeons may reduce breast cancer overtreatment [535d]
- Bridging the 'Valley of Death' in carbon capture [535d]
- New study addresses a long-standing diversity bias in human genetics [535d]
- Forests endure as carbon sink despite regional pressures [535d]
- Paving the way to extremely fast, compact computer memory [535d]
- Logged forests can still have ecological value -- if not pushed too far [535d]
- New gene therapy for muscular dystrophy offers hope [535d]
- Key driver for epithelial cancer development identified [535d]
- Genome recording makes living cells their own historians [535d]
- Study finds persistent proteins may influence metabolomics results [535d]
- Llama nanobodies: A breakthrough in building HIV immunity [535d]
- The magnet trick: New invention makes vibrations disappear [535d]
- Chatbot Iris offers students individual support [535d]
- Enzyme-powered 'snot bots' help deliver drugs in sticky situations [535d]
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