The Brutalist Report - science
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- A good idea is not enough: Experts explain what helps digital health start-ups succeed [14d]
- Could AI create a new form of inequality in South Africa? [14d]
- Measuring process over product: AI approach assesses learning processes [14d]
- The rise of space AI might explain the Fermi paradox [14d]
- Europe's deadly heat wave scorches east, Slovakia hits record [14d]
- How PFAS chain length influences environmental fate and water treatment [14d]
- School performance linked to youth criminal justice [14d]
- Lipids and DNA nanostructures independently control artificial cell mechanics [14d]
- Tailored supplier strategies could cut emissions better than one-size-fits-all procurement [14d]
- AI tool reliably predicts the flame resistance of new materials [14d]
- Testing the orbital mechanics of giant mirrors [14d]
- Unexpected pathway turns water and CO₂ into climate‑neutral methane on nickel–zirconia [14d]
- Plutonium compound unlocks rare topological quantum behavior with potential nuclear science applications [14d]
- New Horizons tracks solar wind slowdown as interstellar atoms add drag [14d]
- What DC's algal bloom reveals about a growing water threat [14d]
- Cochlea network model reveals how inner ear may sort sound from noise [14d]
- First-of-a-kind laser spring opens up new avenues for plasma control [14d]
- The 20km ripple effect: How mines can trigger distant deforestation in Africa [14d]
- Deep inside crocodile skulls, 100 million years of brain evolution barely registers [14d]
- Breakthrough for aquaculture: Oral vaccine protects fish from fatal nervous necrosis virus [14d]
- Graphene can hold multiple states of superconductivity, a new study finds [14d]
- Faster tests reveal six fluoropolymer microplastics, including four rarely tracked types [14d]
- Rare inner ear cells point to regenerative hearing treatments [14d]
- Does traffic drive street crime? Our study investigated [14d]
- Disorder creates direction-dependent optics in compound semiconductors [14d]
- New cellular model for rare and deadly melanomas enables study of immunotherapy resistance [14d]
- What science tells us about the algae bloom in the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool [14d]
- Deep-sea extremophile yields protein that forms super stable biofilm [14d]
- Urban growth may slow by 2100, leaving big cities smaller than expected [14d]
- NASA tests new refuel device for future in-space refueling missions [14d]
- Cyclic sealing and drainage on the Gofar Oceanic Transform Fault revealed [14d]
- Great Barrier Reef drilling reveals repeated collapse, regrowth and migration since last ice age [14d]
- Venezuela earthquakes add tragic new layer to the country's humanitarian crisis [14d]
- Structural blueprint for RNA therapeutics reveals why some siRNA molecules work better than others [14d]
- Table sugar could hold a cheaper, quicker key to making vital drugs [14d]
- Video games are helping players imagine the realities of climate migration [14d]
- Cultural values may decide when comforting others feels like real support [14d]
- Q&A: What happens when warming streams push young salmon beyond their limits [14d]
- Some boreal forest species fail to recover even 100 years after clearcutting [14d]
- England's public library collections are in danger of being hollowed out, new research warns [14d]
- New data shows drop in Scotland's harbor seal numbers and sparks concern for gray seal population [14d]
- Understudied enzyme helps S. aureus pathogen prosper, study finds [14d]
- Why Europe's rising plant diversity may signal habitat disruption, not ecological recovery [14d]
- Synthetic chemical framework can switch magnetic spin states at near ambient temperatures [14d]
- Gold-laced nanoparticles could eventually spot and treat endometriosis without surgery [14d]
- Rent paid on Atlanta's west side is building wealth in Buckhead, study finds [14d]
- When mitochondria grow abnormally long, leaked RNA may activate anti-tumor immune responses [15d]
- Bridging the gap between people and nature: The need for biocultural approaches to restoration [15d]
- Disabling SagA enzyme in VREfm infections makes drug-resistant bacteria vulnerable to vancomycin [15d]
- Analyzing avalanches on asteroid Vesta offers new method for understanding regolith processes [15d]
- New superconductors identified, unlocking process that could yield thousands more [15d]
- Oil price shocks have exposed car‑dependent cities. Here's what governments can do [15d]
- New Delhi announces EV policy to combat air pollution [15d]
- Ozone depletion began decades before discovery of ozone hole, scientists find [15d]
- Can climate shocks change how people feel about paying taxes? [15d]
- There may be 3 times more insect species than previously thought [15d]
- Sweltering Midwest heat cancels outdoor plans as cooling centers open and the East braces [15d]
- As communities face more frequent hazard warnings, we need better systems to avoid 'emergency fatigue' [15d]
- Bronze Age boat carvings point to maritime links from Iberia to Scandinavia [15d]
- 40°C in Paris: extreme summer heat is no longer exceptional for most of Europe [15d]
- A goat's tooth may have solved a 100‑year debate about ancient Greek farming [15d]
- Spiders benefit from seemingly monotonous forests [15d]
- Heat is destroying Australia's underwater forests. Seaweed biobanks could help save them [15d]
- Nova V612 Scuti's light curve becomes audio, revealing how stellar shocks evolved [15d]
- What universities are getting wrong about teaching in the age of AI [15d]
- Psychologists survey students to determine what they really think about social media [15d]
- Switching spin states in manganese ions with light opens new path for molecular memory [15d]
- Unintended climate trade-off: Clean air policies intensify urban heat island in humid cities, study finds [15d]
- Uncovering the trigger behind slow earthquakes [15d]
- Solar storms leave their mark on cosmic rays that reach Earth [15d]
- Hawaiian short-eared owl deaths in Hawaiʻi primarily caused by vehicle collisions [15d]
- First ever dinosaur found in Antarctica described for science [15d]
- COVID-era renter protection law slashed Virginia evictions, research finds [15d]
- Why people worldwide see some mental abilities as inborn and others as learned [15d]
- For hiring, remote work means more expertise, research finds [15d]
- Light-activated compound kills antibiotic-resistant bacteria by turning its own defense enzyme against it [15d]
- Decline in plankton across Northeast Atlantic sends stark warning for ocean health [15d]
- Inviting students to shape support systems can improve mental health and campus environments [15d]
- Giraffes combine quantities similarly to addition [15d]
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