The Brutalist Report - science
- No new articles in the last 24 hours.
- What heat can tell us about battery chemistry: Using the Peltier effect to study lithium-ion cells [238d]
- How trustworthy is your dog's DNA test? [238d]
- Why recycling plastic is not a quick fix [238d]
- Gender bias leads to lower-rated female films, researchers say [238d]
- Analysis establishes a framework for fairness in accounting, auditing [238d]
- Harnessing the mechanisms of fungal bioluminescence to confer autonomous luminescence in plant and animal cells [238d]
- New study discovers how altered protein folding drives multicellular evolution [238d]
- 'Politicians in robes': How a sharp right turn imperiled trust in the Supreme Court [238d]
- New study finds limited correlation between canine lymphoma and proximity to environmental toxins [238d]
- Research explores the development of our most human attribute: The chin [238d]
- Designing nanoparticles for pregnancy-safe treatments [238d]
- Pentagon says no evidence of secret US work on alien tech [238d]
- Bald eagles eat prairie dogs? Researchers underscore relationship between raptors and rodents in the Great Plains [238d]
- Reduced red meat intake could hit Scotland climate goals [238d]
- Populations of the future: Updated tool helps to visualize projections [238d]
- Video: New radar mission for Europe [238d]
- 2023-24 winter warmest on record for mainland US [238d]
- Nutritional value of meat should be considered when comparing carbon footprints, says study [238d]
- NASA unveils design for message heading to Jupiter's moon Europa [238d]
- Inland waters are a blind spot in greenhouse gas emissions [238d]
- Hoping for victory can stand in the way of peace, psychologists say [238d]
- Why do we blame the victim? [238d]
- Drones could help map the lunar surface with extreme precision [238d]
- Q&A: How will generative artificial intelligence affect political advertising in 2024? [238d]
- Effects of oil and gas platform decommissioning on Moray Firth porpoises [238d]
- NASA Pi Day challenge serves up a mathematical marvel [238d]
- Pushing the boundary on ultralow frequency gravitational waves [238d]
- Study finds American trust in scientific expertise survived polarization and previous administration's attack on science [238d]
- Primatologist observes how monkeys change behavior to survive deforestation [238d]
- A new approach to 24/7 air quality monitoring using cameras [238d]
- El Nino raises food security risk in southern Africa: FAO [238d]
- How long will advanced civilizations try to communicate with us? [238d]
- Why did more female infants than male infants die in Europe from 1700 to 1950? [238d]
- Carbon emissions and El Nino push oceans to record temperatures [238d]
- Open creativity: Increased creativity due to network relationships [238d]
- A fresh warning from experts on the dangers of posting your kids online [238d]
- Researchers use 2D bimetallic MOFs to create Se-containing electrocatalysts for overall water splitting [238d]
- Selective dual-wavelength olefin metathesis 3D-printing: How engineers are using SWOMP [238d]
- Improving wood products could be a key to reducing greenhouse gas emissions, researchers suggest [238d]
- Research unveils effective STEM program models for high school students from historically marginalized communities [238d]
- Study finds there's a right way and a wrong way to deliver negative feedback in the workplace [238d]
- Study describes inconsistencies in how different Earth system models predict soil carbon levels [238d]
- Unexpected outcomes: Digital nudges in online teamwork [238d]
- New study unveils strategies to combat disinformation wars on social media [238d]
- Researchers see an increase in the number of extreme cold days in North China during 2003–2012 [238d]
- Working from home can make workers healthier and happier, benefits employers [238d]
- Rare access to hammerhead shark embryos reveals secrets of its unique head development [238d]
- Insurance is the latest weapon financial abusers use against their partners. Here's how we fix it [238d]
- How green corridors are breathing new life into French forests [238d]
- Facing illegal wildlife trade in the European union: A call for comprehensive measures [238d]
- We're working out how to solve crimes in space—the final frontier of forensic science [238d]
- Titanosaurs were the biggest land animals Earth's ever seen, combining reptile and mammal traits [238d]
- The Southern Ocean upwelling is a mecca for whales and tuna that's worth celebrating and protecting [238d]
- Too much heat in the kitchen: Survey shows toxic work conditions mean many chefs are getting out [238d]
- Meta's lost revenue is a huge hit for public interest journalism in Australia, which was already reeling from cutbacks [238d]
- Personal trauma and criminal offending are closely linked—arguing for justice system reform [238d]
- CSI in space: Analyzing bloodstain patterns in microgravity [238d]
- Flood risk mapping is a public good, so why the public resistance in Canada? [238d]
- Transcription factors that regulate development of light organs and bioluminescence in firefly identified [238d]
- 80% of Australians think AI risk is a global priority—the government needs to step up, say researchers [238d]
- Researchers: Cultural burning is better for Australian soils than prescribed burning, or no burning at all [238d]
- 'Are we dating the same guy?' These women-run groups are accused of being toxic, but they carry a feminist legacy [238d]
- How families glued to separate devices can connect again [238d]
- Keep the change: Scientists analyze the attitudes of shop assistants [238d]
- Good news for coral reef restoration efforts: Study finds 'full recovery' of reef growth within four years [238d]
- Research progress in the scientific investigation of the Yarlung Tsangbo Grand Canyon [238d]
- A better handle on the emissions budget for the Paris climate targets [238d]
- A physics-based predictive tool to speed up battery and superconductor research [238d]
- New study reveals the evolutionary nature of animal friendships [238d]
- Could Fukushima's radioactive water pose lasting threat to humans and the environment? [238d]
- Uncovering the role of FOXO1 in vascular development and transcriptional dynamics in endothelial cells [238d]
- Quantum imaging could create bright future for advanced microscopes [238d]
- How water guides the assembly of collagen, the building block of all humans [239d]
- Researchers develop artificial building blocks of life [239d]
- How does a bacterium know it's time to split apart? [239d]
- Early experiments show Ebola-fighting potential of engineered bacteria [239d]
- Egg-laying caecilian amphibians produce milk for their young, find scientists [239d]
- Horizontal gene transfer: How fungi improve their ability to infect insects [239d]
- Mutation solves a century-old mystery in meiosis [239d]
- Climate change in Greenland could cause trouble for Arctic char [239d]
- Doing more but learning less: Addressing the risks of AI in research [239d]
- Threatened in their homeland, feral Mexican parrots thrive on LA's exotic landscaping [239d]
- Dietitian suggests adding a little sugar to water for horses away from home [239d]
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