The Brutalist Report - science
- Lab-grown 'mini-guts' could help in development of new and more personalized treatments for Crohn's disease [269d]
- How the brain is affected by Huntington's Disease [269d]
- Feeling rough after your COVID shot? Congrats, it's working! [269d]
- Lone Star State: Tracking a low-mass star as it speeds across the Milky Way [269d]
- NASA's Webb opens new window on supernova science [269d]
- Unregulated sales of a toxic and hallucinogenic mushroom endanger public health [269d]
- Case studies show how quasi-governmental organizations could strengthen climate adaptation governance [269d]
- Brain's structure hangs in 'a delicate balance' [269d]
- Protein study could help researchers develop new antibiotics [269d]
- Study reveals target for reversing scar tissue after heart attack [269d]
- Researchers engineer new approach for controlling thermal emission [269d]
- Novel radiotracer produces high quality images of 'Alzheimer's disease of the heart' [269d]
- Four-legged, dog-like robot 'sniffs' hazardous gases in inaccessible environments [269d]
- Fine-tuning leaf angle with CRISPR improves sugarcane yield [269d]
- Early life exposure to weed pollen could increase childhood asthma risk [269d]
- Two can play that game: juvenile dolphins who play together are more successful as adults [269d]
- Protocol for creating 'wired miniature brains' [269d]
- Advanced AI-based techniques scale-up solving complex combinatorial optimization problems [269d]
- Study shows first evidence of male-female differences in how pain can be produced [269d]
- Hubble finds surprises around a star that erupted 40 years ago [269d]
- Researchers demonstrate the first chip-based 3D printer [269d]
- Webb telescope reveals asteroid collision in neighboring star system [269d]
- Researchers create skin-inspired sensory robots to provide medical treatment [269d]
- Researchers use 3D visualization to predict, prevent hurricane damage [269d]
- Upstream and downstream: River study highlights cross-country inequities [269d]
- Disturbed blood flow can damage the vessel wall in cases of aortic dilation [269d]
- Peers crucial in shaping boys' confidence in math skills [269d]
- How human derived RNA fragments help the Hepatitis E virus [269d]
- Study estimates that between 1980 and 2020, 135 million premature deaths could be linked to fine particulate matter pollution [269d]
- Optimism wards off procrastination [269d]
- Improved prime editing system makes gene-sized edits in human cells at therapeutic levels [269d]
- Lung organoids unveil secret: How pathogens infect human lung tissue [269d]
- The solar system may have passed through dense interstellar clouds 2 million years ago, altering Earth's climate [269d]
- Interventions against misinformation also increase skepticism toward reliable sources [269d]
- Splitting hairs: Science of biomechanics to understand of bad hair days [269d]
- Planetary Health Diet associated with lower risk of premature death, lower environmental impact [269d]
- Clinical trial shows promising results in a two-drug combination that curbs methamphetamine use [269d]
- Gut microbes from aged mice induce inflammation in young mice, study finds [269d]
- Novel Genetic Clock discovers oldest known marine plant [269d]
- Benefits of failure are overrated [269d]
- New study helps explain how elderly individuals react differently to COVID-19 than young people [269d]
- Testing immune cells in the placenta may indicate the health of fetal brain immune cells [269d]
- Does a beet a day keep heart disease away? [269d]
- Discovery unveils key to heart development in womb, unravels cause of spongy heart disease [269d]
- Bartonella DNA Found in Blood of Patients With Psychosis [269d]
- 'Quantum optical antennas' provide more powerful measurements on the atomic level [269d]
- Statins for heart disease prevention could be recommended for far fewer Americans if new risk equation is adopted [269d]
- Multicenter clinical study supports safety of deep general anesthesia [269d]
- Elephants have names for each other like people do, new study shows [269d]
- In a significant first, researchers detect water frost on solar system's tallest volcanoes [269d]
- Galactic bloodlines: Many nearby star clusters originate from only three 'families' [269d]
- Super-chilled brain cell molecules reveal how epilepsy drug works [269d]
- Small, cool and sulfurous exoplanet may help write recipe for planetary formation [269d]
- Researchers demonstrate new way to 'squeeze' infrared light [269d]
- 'Cutting the cable' between CD8+ T and T regulatory cells enhances checkpoint immunotherapy [269d]
- Income inequality and carbon dioxide emissions have a complex relationship [269d]
- Pesticides impair mobility and immune system of Brazilian native stingless bees, study shows [269d]
- Study suggests disproportionate number of the most innovative CEOs hail from US counties with a frontier history [269d]
- NASA watches Mars light up during epic solar storm [269d]
- Shortage of skilled plant breeders could impact global food security [269d]
- Splitting hairs: Research team applies science of biomechanics to understand our bad hair days [269d]
- Textured tiles help endangered eels overcome human-made river obstacles, study shows [269d]
- Fine-tuning leaf angle with CRISPR improves sugarcane yield [269d]
- Report finds marketers still facing discrimination and exclusion in Western Australia [269d]
- Webb opens new window on supernova science [269d]
- Researchers find association between media diet and science-consistent beliefs about climate change [269d]
- Palm oil by-product transforms into PVC thermal stabilizer with possibilities for recycling and sustainability [269d]
- Case studies show how quasi-governmental organizations could strengthen climate adaptation governance [269d]
- Researchers build quantitative model with the aim of imposing cost-efficient trade sanctions [269d]
- New insights on the role of nucleon exchange in nuclear fusion [269d]
- Small, cool and sulfurous exoplanet may help write recipe for planetary formation [269d]
- Lone star state: Tracking a low-mass star as it speeds across the Milky Way [269d]
- New study reveals brain's fractal-like structure near phase transition, a finding that may be universal across species [269d]
- Novel quantum sensor breaks limits of optical measurement using entanglement [269d]
- Climate change widening Asia's education gap [269d]
- Wire-cut forensic examinations currently too unreliable for court, new study says [269d]
- Study finds juvenile dolphins who play together are more successful as adults [269d]
- Rapid approach to creating cyclic peptide opens the way for new antibiotics [269d]
- Synthetic leather made from recyclable and bio-based PBS [269d]
- Study reveals complex dynamics of philanthropic funding for US science [269d]
- 'Quantum optical antennas' provide more powerful measurements on the atomic level [269d]
- Researchers use 3D visualization to predict, prevent hurricane damage [269d]
- Euclid is finding free floating planets in Orion, too [269d]
- Mapping soil health: New index enhances soil organic carbon prediction [269d]
- Study: An estimated 135 million premature deaths linked to fine particulate matter pollution between 1980 and 2020 [269d]
- Nanoparticles reprogram mouse immune systems to cope with allergens [269d]
- New imaging device combines education and microbial research [269d]
- EU puts digital Earth in orbit for climate-change fight [269d]
- Studying archaeological roads gives insights into connectivity and movement [269d]
- Study identifies ways consumers and businesses can handle food waste in food service-businesses [269d]
- 'Smart' chemistry allows recycling of networked rubbery materials [269d]
- Analyzing the benefits of trans-boundary cooperation in the Lancang-Mekong River Basin [269d]
- Study finds natural climate variability impacts Arctic and global warming [269d]
- Researchers identify potential microbes and genes that impact forever chemicals [269d]
- Webb Telescope reveals asteroid collision in neighboring star system [269d]
- Using the moon's soil to support life, energy generation and construction [269d]
- Research reveals visuals' crucial role in strategic decision-making [269d]
- Galactic bloodlines: Many nearby star clusters originate from only three 'families' [269d]
- Interventions against misinformation also increase skepticism toward reliable sources, finds study [269d]
- Air regulators roll back rule that let major Southern California polluters avoid millions in fees [269d]
- With new Omega tool, scientists can rapidly analyze complex biological images through AI-powered 'conversations' [269d]
- Employing optical lightning data to identify gamma-ray flashes from thunderstorms [269d]
- High-tech kangaroo collars aim to prevent road accidents [269d]
- Study results suggest peers are crucial in shaping boys' confidence in math skills [269d]
- What a bath, taken 1,000 years ago, can tell us about the conflicted English kingdom of the 11th century [269d]
- Legislation would block carbon dioxide pipelines in Illinois for up to two years [269d]
- Researchers demonstrate new way to 'squeeze' infrared light [269d]
- Researchers measure the cost of unsustainable industrial fishing on coastal communities—and it's vast [269d]
- The Parthenon marbles evoke particularly fierce repatriation debates: An archaeologist explains why [269d]
- The global orange juice crisis is caused by disease and bad weather: How to keep it on the breakfast table [269d]
- NOAA's hurricane hunting GOES-U satellite nears SpaceX Falcon Heavy launch [269d]
- Elephants have names for each other like people do, new study shows [269d]
- First detection of frost on the solar system's tallest volcanoes on Mars [269d]
- Only 10% of Australia's native plants can be bought as seed: How to make plantings more diverse [269d]
- What will a robot make of your résumé? The bias problem with using AI in job recruitment [269d]
- Think tech killed penmanship? Messy handwriting was a problem centuries before smartphones [269d]
- Farming with a mixture of crops, animals and trees is better for the environment—evidence from Ghana and Malawi suggests [269d]
- Novel genetic clock discovers oldest known marine plant: Seagrass clone in the Baltic sea is more than 1,400 years old [269d]
- States beg insurers not to drop climate-threatened homes [269d]
- The Oceans Court ruled that the seas are a hot mess. Why haven't you heard about it? [269d]
- Spliceosomes: New technique tracks proteins involved in RNA splicing [269d]
- Wind farms, key to clean-energy efforts, threaten birds and bats: Developers urged to plan for wildlife [269d]
- Compressed titanium and sulfur nanoribbons can transmit electricity without energy loss, scientists find [269d]
- Hunter-gatherer diets weren't always heavy on meat: Morocco study reveals a plant-based diet [269d]
- Protein study could help researchers develop new antibiotics [269d]
- Siberia's 'mammoth graveyard' reveals 800-year human interactions with woolly beasts [269d]
- The US Drought Monitor is a critical tool for the arid West: Can it keep up with climate change? [269d]
- Deriving mammalian DNA methylation predictors for maximum life span, gestation time and age at sexual maturity [269d]
- New chip-scale erbium-based laser offers broad wavelength tunability [269d]
- Lung organoids reveal how pathogens infect human lung tissue [269d]
- How does light interact with matter at extreme intensities, near the Schwinger limit? [269d]
- How transcription delivers epigenetic silencing [269d]
- Upstream and downstream: River study highlights cross-country inequities [269d]
- New tool developed to improve deadly superbug treatment [269d]
- Star cluster shines in new look from NASA's Chandra [269d]
- The impact of carbon impurities on the quality of gallium nitride crystals [269d]
- Entangled neutrinos may lead to heavier element formation [269d]
- Excessive vegetation in Arabia triggered massive butterfly migrations in 2019 across Europe and Africa: Study [269d]
- The discovery of new turbulence transition in fusion plasmas [269d]
- Fifty-year mystery of Mars' slow polar ice flow solved [269d]
- Fixing excess carbon dioxide: Biocatalyst-driven carboxylation under mild conditions [269d]
- Success follows failure less often than expected, study finds [269d]
- Astronomers observe giant outburst of a distant X-ray binary [269d]
- Astrophysicists calculate the likelihood that Earth was exposed to cold harsh interstellar clouds 2 million years ago [269d]
- Improved prime editing system makes gene-sized edits in human cells at therapeutic levels [269d]
- Wild horse species returns to the Kazakh steppes [269d]
- India's heat wave longest ever, worse to come [269d]
- Flooding and landslides kill three in Vietnam's north [269d]
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