The Brutalist Report - science
- Exercise as an anti-aging intervention to avoid detrimental impact of mental fatigue [355d]
- 3-D Printed skin to replace animal testing [355d]
- Picky eaters by day, buffet by night: Butterfly, moth diets sync to plant aromas [356d]
- Touchlessly moving cells: Biotech automation and an acoustically levitating diamond [356d]
- Drug-delivering aptamers target leukemia stem cells for one-two knockout punch [356d]
- Physicists uncover electronic interactions mediated via spin waves [356d]
- Nurture more important than nature for robotic hand [356d]
- Climate change and prehistoric human populations: Eastward shift of settlement areas at the end of the last ice age [356d]
- Successful therapy confirmed for newborns with the fatal metabolic disorder MoCD type A [356d]
- MIT engineers develop a way to mass manufacture nanoparticles that deliver cancer drugs directly to tumors [356d]
- Global study establishes long-term risk of stroke [356d]
- Researchers find intestinal immune cell prevents food allergies [356d]
- New vaccine concept tackles harmful bacteria in the intestine [356d]
- Cellular regulator of mRNA vaccine revealed... offering new therapeutic options [356d]
- Animal behavioral diversity at risk in the face of declining biodiversity [356d]
- Powerful new software platform could reshape biomedical research by making data analysis more accessible [356d]
- Revealing capillaries and cells in living organs with ultrasound [356d]
- How the brain and inner ear are formed [356d]
- How GPS helps older drivers stay on the roads [356d]
- Machine learning helps construct an evolutionary timeline of bacteria [356d]
- Runaway battery improves safety [356d]
- An answer to green energy in hydrogen-generating marine microbes [356d]
- Bees actively adjust flower choice based on color and distance: Updating 'flower constancy' beyond Darwin's theory [356d]
- Corpse flowers are threatened by spotty recordkeeping [356d]
- Riding the AI wave toward rapid, precise ocean simulations [356d]
- Surgery doesn't always help with chronic rhinosinusitis -- a new risk score predicts treatment efficacy [356d]
- Carbon capture technology to produce clean fuel from air [356d]
- Thirst and hunger neurons [356d]
- Common phrases, not fancy words, make you sound more fluent in a foreign language [356d]
- Migrating roach fish have sharper eyesight [356d]
- Could targeting Parkinson's outside of the brain improve symptoms? [356d]
- Precision medicine could be possible in the fight against antibiotic resistance [356d]
- Western diet causes inflammation, traditional African food protects [356d]
- How researchers are shining a light on kidney disease [356d]
- PEPITEM sequence shows effects in psoriasis, comparable to steroid cream [356d]
- Cognitive decline comes sooner for people with heart failure [356d]
- Researchers recycle wind turbine blade materials to make improved plastics [356d]
- Solar wave squeezed Jupiter's magnetic shield to unleash heat [356d]
- Carbon capture could become practical with scalable, affordable materials [356d]
- Solar cells made of moon dust could power future space exploration [356d]
- 17 modifiable risk factors shared by stroke, dementia, and late-life depression [356d]
- On water recycling, Nevada leads other states, report finds [356d]
- 'Making memories' via social media is an increasingly 'crucial' part of live events [356d]
- Dialysis device that uses nanoelectrokinetic technology could be used as portable artificial kidney [356d]
- SMEs' ability to innovate is strongly tied to the learning and decision-making skills of managers [356d]
- What you do before and during a tornado could mean the difference between life and death [356d]
- Marine microbes reveal new gene clusters for hydrogen production [356d]
- Drug-delivering aptamers target leukemia stem cells for a one-two knockout punch [356d]
- Over 95% of sponsored influencer posts on X are not disclosed [356d]
- When heavy rainfall threatens flooding, you can protect yourself. Here's how [356d]
- Prey size plays surprising role in competition among wolves, bears and cougars [356d]
- Perseverance rover witnesses one Martian dust devil eating another [356d]
- Zeolite catalyst enables sustainable production of biodegradable plastic materials [356d]
- Quantum statistical approach quiets big, noisy data [356d]
- Infrared heavy-metal-free quantum dots deliver sensitive and fast sensors for eye-safe LIDAR applications [356d]
- Acoustic levitation of diamond inspires biotech automation innovation [356d]
- Anesthetic gas emissions have dropped by 27% in last decade, but there's room for improvement [356d]
- New function of DNA repair protein ATR discovered [356d]
- The fungal circadian clock: A potential target for combating plant diseases [356d]
- Common catalyst works by cycling between two different forms, upending a long-held supposition [356d]
- Common phrases, not fancy words, can make you sound more fluent in a foreign language [356d]
- Investment behaviors characterized by masculinity can negatively impact returns, study finds [356d]
- Gender role beliefs can shape desire for parenthood [356d]
- European catfish has prolonged breeding season, enhancing its invasive potential [356d]
- Storing CO₂ beneath the German North Sea: Interim report [356d]
- Firefly light gives rise to sensor that detects cellular alterations [356d]
- Fluorescent biosensor tracks plant RNA in real time for better crops and biosecurity [356d]
- Bonobos combine calls in similar ways to human language, study finds [356d]
- Stem cell barcoding reveals how the brain and inner ear are formed [356d]
- Molecular clock analysis shows bacteria used oxygen long before widespread photosynthesis [356d]
- Animal behavioral diversity at risk in the face of declining biodiversity [356d]
- Cellular regulator of mRNA vaccine revealed, offering new therapeutic options [356d]
- Antibiotic resistance among key bacterial species plateaus over time, study shows [356d]
- Some insects are declining, but what's happening to the other 99%? [356d]
- Rising odds asteroid that briefly threatened Earth will hit moon [356d]
[ai]
- Climate change and prehistoric human populations: Study finds eastward shift of settlement areas at end of last Ice Age [356d]
- Physicists uncover electronic interactions mediated via spin waves [356d]
- Would you join the resistance if stuck in an authoritarian regime? Here's the psychology behind such a move [356d]
- Timid tinkerers: Shy mice are more persistent problem-solvers, study finds [356d]
- Twisted crystals open door to smaller, more powerful sensors for optical devices [356d]
- Exploring Titan's icy hydrocarbon cycle [356d]
- 'Liberation Day' tariffs are the highest in decades. An economist explains how that could hurt the US [356d]
- Lessons from El Salvador for US university leaders facing attacks from presidential administration [356d]
- Intriguing excess of top-quark pairs hints at discovery of smallest composite particle [356d]
- Engineers develop a way to mass manufacture nanoparticles that deliver cancer drugs directly to tumors [356d]
- Scientists develop a way to scale up spatial genomics and lower costs [356d]
- When a black hole winks at you: Variability identified in supermassive black hole in Andromeda galaxy [356d]
- Bizarre-looking dinosaur challenges what we know about the evolution of fingers [356d]
- Proceed with caution: Emerging marine-climate projects outpacing effective governance [356d]
- Theoretical physicists unveil 'supermazes' to decode black-hole microstructure [356d]
- Supercomputer models microtubule dynamics, offering new insights into neurodegenerative diseases [356d]
- Fathers' consistent parenting nurtures bonds through teen years [356d]
- Imagining what the world could look like without fossil fuels spurs people to action [356d]
- AI model can predict lightning-induced wildfires with unprecedented accuracy [356d]
- How much microplastic is generated during mountain biking? [356d]
- Students design a mission to Venus on the cheap [356d]
- Studying Uranian moons using passive radar sounding [356d]
- Why not every saltwater inflow benefits the Baltic Sea equally [356d]
- Australia and New Zealand are plagued by 'tall poppy syndrome'—but would a cure be worse than the disease? [356d]
- What Donald Trump's dramatic US trade war means for global climate action [356d]
- Bacteria-enhanced graphene oxide nanoparticles provide triple-action tumor eradication [356d]
- Off-key beginnings: Baby lemurs sing out of tune, just like human children [356d]
- Chromatin remodeling captured in comprehensive structural study [356d]
- Jumbo phages infect cells with a protective cloaking mechanism, researchers discover [356d]
- Error correction method reduces photon requirements for quantum computing [356d]
- Smoke from US fires linked to 20,000 premature deaths and $200 billion in health damages in 2017 [356d]
- Long-term measurements reveal cloud sensitivity to changes in atmospheric aerosol concentrations [356d]
- Nitrogen and argon plasma boosts performance of carbon-based supercapacitor electrodes [356d]
- Resolving a key to enterovirus infection: Receptor protein discovery could aid future vaccine design [356d]
- Flies are masters of migration—it's about time they got some credit [356d]
- Astronomers listened to the 'music' of flickering stars—and discovered an unexpected feature [356d]
- Video: What are the dangers of going to space? We asked a NASA expert [356d]
- Dark energy may not be constant—this discovery could undermine our entire model of cosmological history [356d]
- Hierarchical cluster formation in the Milky Way's core caps birth of massive stars [356d]
- Solar cells made of moon dust could power future space exploration [356d]
- A novel approach to assess sources and spatial-temporal variations of atmospheric mercury [356d]
- AI is changing the game for plant proteins [356d]
- Research finds 39% less plastic waste around Australian coastal cities than a decade ago [356d]
- Invisible losses: Thousands of plant species are missing from places they could thrive—humans are the reason [356d]
- Digital technology at food pantries helpful for many, study says [356d]
- 'How was school today?' How to help kids open up and say more than 'fine' [356d]
- Study reveals that migrating roach fish have sharper eyesight [356d]
- Researchers warn of the overlap between offshore wind farms and areas of high biodiversity [356d]
- A 32-bit RISC-V processor made using molybdenum disulfide instead of silicon [356d]
- What 'Adolescence' gets right (and wrong) about the manosphere [356d]
- How hidden lakes threaten Antarctic ice sheet stability [356d]
- Riding the AI wave toward rapid, precise ocean simulations [356d]
- 3D-printed skin imitation equipped with living cells could replace animal testing [356d]
- White Americans in areas with higher Black poverty more likely to attribute racial disparities to lack of effort: Study [356d]
- Solar wind compresses Jupiter's magnetosphere, creating a hot region spanning half the planet's circumference [356d]
- Climate disasters are on the rise: Some states want to make oil companies pay [356d]
- Ocean mixing intensifies central Pacific ENSO via diabatic heating, study reveals [356d]
- HD 144812 is a rare post-red supergiant star in a binary system, observations find [356d]
- Microwave pulses can control ion-molecule reactions at near absolute zero [356d]
- Cover crops provide an often-overlooked reduction in soil carbon erosion, study finds [356d]
- Crystal melting and the glass transition obey the same physical law [356d]
- Vanishing fish, shrinking catches: How overfishing is undermining coastal fisheries [356d]
- Stronger together: Bilby conservation efforts enhanced by Indigenous knowledge [356d]
- Electrochemical method supports nitrogen circular economy [356d]
- Some gut bacteria could make certain drugs less effective, study indicates [356d]
- E. coli evolutionary map could lead to precision medicine against antibiotic resistance [356d]
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