The Brutalist Report - sciencedaily
- Are our refrigerants environmentally safe? The lingering questions about the chemicals keeping us cool [394d]
- 'Fluorescent phoenix' discovered with persistence rivaling Marie Curie's [394d]
- Student refines 100-year-old math problem, expanding wind energy possibilities [395d]
- Select corn lines contain compounds that sicken, kill major crop pest [395d]
- Immunity against seasonal H1N1 flu reduces bird flu severity in ferrets, study suggests [395d]
- Influencer marketing can help tourism industry mitigate waste, pollution [395d]
- Material's 'incipient' property could jumpstart fast, low-power electronics [395d]
- Drug may prevent some migraine attacks in children and teens [395d]
- Researchers make recommendations for promoting sustainable development in mangrove forest areas [395d]
- When the wild things are: Surprising details of mammalian daily activity [395d]
- Do starchy carbs cause cavities? [395d]
- New study supports caution regarding use of steroids [395d]
- Treatment strategy reprograms brain cancer cells, halting tumor growth [395d]
- Genomic tools provide clearer view of health for endangered bats [395d]
- Why brain cancer is often resistant to immunotherapy [395d]
- A new path to recovery: Scientists uncover key brain circuit in the fight against cocaine use disorder [395d]
- Problem-based learning helps students stay in school [395d]
- Blood test could lead to better diagnosis and management of ALS [395d]
- Supercomputing illuminates detailed nuclear structure [395d]
- Possible links between PFAS exposure and childhood cancers [395d]
- Nuns contribute 30 years of critical insight into dementia disorders [395d]
- Extreme heat may speed up aging in older adults [395d]
- A springtail-like jumping robot [395d]
- Morphing robot turns challenging terrain to its advantage [395d]
- School of rock: Properties of rocks in fault zones contribute to earthquake generation [395d]
- Infant mortality tied to concentration of lead in air [395d]
- Simulating scientists: New tool for AI-powered scientific discovery [395d]
- Researchers create the world's smallest shooting video game using nanoscale technology [395d]
- Adsorptive regolith on Mars soaks up water, researchers reveal [395d]
- New method searches through 10 sextillion drug molecules [395d]
- New low-cost challenger to quantum computer: Ising machine [395d]
- Microplastics in ocean linked to disabilities for coastal residents [395d]
- Researchers uncover key insights into CO2 reduction using SnO-based electrocatalysts [395d]
- Schizophrenia is reflected in the brain structure [395d]
- Feeding anemone: Symbiote fish actively feed hosts in wild [395d]
- New AI-powered tool could enhance traumatic brain injury investigations in forensics and law enforcement [395d]
- A protein from tiny tardigrades may help cancer patients tolerate radiation therapy [395d]
- Environmental impact of unexploded ordnance in the Baltic Sea [395d]
- AI generates playful, human-like games [395d]
- Time interfaces: The gateway to four-dimensional quantum optics [395d]
- Genetic risk of schizophrenia affects men and women differently [395d]
- Protein design: Flexible components allow new architectures [395d]
- New genetic risk score identifies individuals at risk for heart disease who may benefit most from cholesterol-lowering therapies [395d]
- Novel photochromic glass can store rewritable 3D patterns long term [395d]
- Some fuel lodges in the inner walls of fusion vessels: Researchers now have a better idea of how much [395d]
- A new drug screening method could bring a solution to drug delivery and efficacy issues [395d]
- How parenthood may help keep your brain young [395d]
- Researchers making clean water more accessible [395d]
- Missing protein keeps mice slim, even on a high-fat diet [395d]
- Beyond the burn: Harvesting dead wood to reduce wildfires and store carbon [395d]
- When dads take leave, moms breastfeed longer [395d]
- Droplet forming power is key for cells to attach properly [395d]
- Earliest evidence for humans in rainforests [395d]
- Fish teeth show how ease of innovation enables rapid evolution [395d]
- Comprehensive resource describes functions of more than 20,000 human genes [395d]
- AI accelerates discovery of neurodevelopmental disorder-associated genes [395d]
- Genomics approach to metabolism reveals how reactions flow [395d]
- Multiplexing entanglement in a quantum network [395d]
- Bacteria consumed by immune cells become part of the cell [395d]
- New spatial mechanism for the coexistence of tree species [395d]
- New photon-avalanching nanoparticles could enable next-generation optical computers [395d]
- What can theoretical physics teach us about knitting? [395d]
- Discovery of rare gene variants provides window into tailored type 2 diabetes treatment [395d]
- New method developed to dramatically enhance bioelectronic sensors [395d]
- Hidden allies: Trees and fungi [395d]
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