The Brutalist Report - science
- No new articles in the Past 12 Hours.
- MXene-coated lenses for safer and smarter wearables [245d]
- Staff working from home less likely to get pay raises or promotions, says research [245d]
- Donkey skin secretion that repels deer ticks shows promise as natural alternative to DEET [245d]
- Workplace equality laws spark surprising gains for women in the boardroom, research finds [245d]
- Why organizations in unstable times should listen to their own employees [245d]
- A semi-automated manufacturing process for cost-efficient quantum cascade laser modules [245d]
- Scientists develop 'mosquito STD' to combat malaria [245d]
- Human mobility data from smartphones pinpoints where people and wildlife cross paths, aiding conservation [245d]
- Burnout is often caused by factors entirely unrelated to work, shows study [245d]
- Study challenges prevailing stereotypes, provides new insights into incel community [245d]
- A covalent bond links lysine and cysteine in proteins together under oxidizing conditions, stabilizing them [245d]
- Mechanical model reveals how prions trigger a domino effect to spread misfolded proteins [245d]
- Future telescopes could detect life managing their planet atmospheres [245d]
- Missions to Mars with the Starship could only take three months [245d]
- Study investigates why mathematical identity is important for students' motivation and competence [245d]
- Alcohol consumption in avian species: Birds may be drinking on the wing, but in moderation [245d]
- Consciousness and collaboration were fundamental to shaping knowledge, show astronomy archives of premodern China [245d]
- Why Brazil's Quilombola communities are still fighting for the land they're owed [245d]
- Long-used red pigment carmine has a surprisingly complex porous structure [245d]
- Study finds teachers, students together can form own social constructions of thinking [245d]
- ChatGPT useful for learning languages, but students' critical vision must be fostered when using it, says study [245d]
- After 60 years, the search for a missing plane in Lake Superior remains fruitless [245d]
- Terahertz calorimetry captures thermodynamics of protein and water interactions at picosecond resolution [245d]
- Most freshwater game fish in Southern California carry invasive parasites capable of infecting humans, study finds [245d]
- AI algorithms approach the theoretical limit of optical measurement precision [245d]
- Star quakes and monster shock waves: Researchers simulate a black hole consuming a neutron star [245d]
- Magnetic curtains on the sun: Solar telescope reveals ultra-fine striations that shape surface dynamics [245d]
- Study resolves diatom tree of life, revealing rapid speciation 170 million years ago [245d]
- Light-guided 'bacterial robot' system tackles antibiotic resistance [245d]
- Decades-long experiment finds muon still behaving unexpectedly [245d]
- Over half of Europe and Mediterranean basin hit by drought in mid-May [245d]
- Webb rounds out picture of Sombrero galaxy's disk [245d]
- Hubble filters a barred spiral [245d]
- Memory matters for quantum atomic motion on metals [245d]
- AI used to design immune-safe 'zinc finger' proteins for gene therapy [245d]
- Genetic diversity highlights increasing threat of H9N2 avian influenza [245d]
- Squid study sparks interdisciplinary insight into the physics of growth [245d]
- Stone age BBQ: How early humans may have preserved meat with fire [245d]
- 'Crazy idea' about cooling effects of Pluto's haze confirmed by new Webb data [246d]
- Student-community partnership grows African leafy vegetables in Minnesota [246d]
- Isolated Torrey pine populations yield insights into genetic diversity [246d]
- Fewer men are choosing to become veterinarians. 'Male flight' could be the reason [246d]
- Research suggests earlier kitten neutering does not affect bodyweight in later life [246d]
- A bottlenose dolphin? Or Tursiops truncatus? Why biologists give organisms those strange, unpronounceable names [246d]
- Why climate professionals are often held to unrealistic standards [246d]
- Telehealth can improve care for cats with chronic health issues [246d]
- It's miller moth season in Colorado. An entomologist explains why they're important, where they're headed [246d]
- Can kelp forests help tackle climate change? [246d]
- Five geoengineering trials the UK is funding to combat global warming [246d]
- Autocrats don't act like Hitler or Stalin anymore. Instead of governing with violence, they use manipulation [246d]
- We asked over 8,700 people in six countries to think about future generations, and this is what we found [246d]
- Baboons walk in line for friendship, not survival, new study finds [246d]
- Greenland's melting ice caps reveal the true extent of climate change [246d]
- What parents and youth athletes can do to protect against abuse in sports [246d]
- One green sea turtle can contain the equivalent of ten ping pong balls in plastic [246d]
- Biodiversity allows for sustainable fisheries and better nutrition [246d]
- Particles energized by magnetic reconnection found in nascent solar wind [246d]
- Weight-based victimization identified as most common form of bullying that schools fail to address [246d]
- Strategic borrowing for defense spending can improve economic welfare, new study suggests [246d]
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