The Brutalist Report - science
- No new articles in the Past 24 Hours.
- From practice to policy: Why farmer collaboration matters for biodiversity [1d]
- Could British companies be sued in the UK for human rights abuses committed overseas? [1d]
- Local governments provide proof that polarization is not inevitable [2d]
- Weather pushes back SpaceX's Crew-12 window, opening door for first ULA launch of year [2d]
- Nature is a powerful ally against fires and floods: So how can it be saved? [2d]
- Anomalous magnetoresistance emerges in antiferromagnetic kagome semimetal [2d]
- Survey finds flashing and cyberflashing drives women to change routes and online habits [2d]
- NASA selects two Earth System Explorers missions [2d]
- Researchers discover L1td1 maintains stem cell pluripotency by degrading totipotency-associated RNAs [2d]
- Study reveals floods are the biggest drivers of plastic pollution in rivers [2d]
- Online banking may shift household money control, making women five times likelier to manage [2d]
- CEOs who have lived through natural disasters tend to prioritize safer workplaces, study finds [2d]
- New record of great white shark in Spain sparks a 160-year review [2d]
- Noise pollution is affecting birds' reproduction, stress levels and more: The good news is we can fix it [2d]
- Climate benefits of tree planting could be reduced by soil carbon loss, expert warns [2d]
- DNA-binding proteins from volcanic lakes could improve disease diagnosis [2d]
- Five ways quantum technology could shape everyday life [2d]
- Why eating cheap chocolate can feel embarrassing, even though no one else cares [2d]
- Forget flowers: Lovers in 18th- and 19th-century Ireland exchanged hair [2d]
- School restrictive smartphone policies may save a small amount of money by reducing staff costs [2d]
- Bacterial hitchhikers can give their hosts super strength [2d]
- Crop rotation boosts number and diversity of microbes in soil, research finds [2d]
- Alexandria on the Tigris: Exploring the forgotten and rediscovered metropolis [2d]
- How charges invert a long-standing empirical law in glass physics [2d]
- Where did that raindrop come from? Climate model ensemble captures worldwide water isotopes over 45 years [2d]
- What's in a name? Information structure parallels discovered across cultures—with repercussions for Asian names [2d]
- Acoustic communication—an overlooked driver in boxfish evolution [2d]
- New dataset reveals how US law has grown more complex over the past century [2d]
- Neural crest cells: Miniature electric muscles that colonize embryonic organs [2d]
- Old galaxies in a young universe? [2d]
- Deep learning detects foodborne bacteria within three hours by eliminating debris misclassifications [2d]
- Software tool can detect hidden errors in complex tissue analyses [2d]
- 'Increase' framing makes research results seem bigger and more important, experiments show [2d]
- Social media feeds: Algorithm redesign could break echo chambers and reduce online polarization [2d]
- Underestimated wake: Shipping traffic causes more turmoil in the Baltic Sea than expected [2d]
- Most of Hawaii's birds contribute to avian malaria transmission, study finds [2d]
- Self-esteem may predict who pursues leadership roles [2d]
- New nanoparticles remove melanoma tumors in mice with low-power near-infrared laser [2d]
- Why mid-career is such a dangerous time for burnout and workplace stress [2d]
- Oldest known sewn hide and other artifacts from Oregon caves shed light on early clothing in harsh climates [2d]
- Media coverage of Asian American Olympians functioned as 'loyalty test' [2d]
- Researchers rebuild microscopic circadian clock that can control genes [2d]
- Trace gases play previously unseen role in cloud droplet formation, research reveals [2d]
- Europe's Ariane 6 to launch Amazon constellation satellites into orbit [2d]
- Passing got faster and more accurate in top soccer leagues, study finds [2d]
- Egalitarianism among hunter-gatherers? What a food-sharing experiment reveals about self-interest [2d]
- In-situ sensor enables real-time monitoring of soil nitrate nitrogen [2d]
- Upcycling genes: 'SUPER' platform improves underperforming genetic parts [2d]
- More banks mean higher costs for borrowers [2d]
- A new inhalable treatment for tuberculosis: Once-weekly nanoparticles match daily oral rifampin in mice [2d]
- The wild physics that keeps your body's electrical system flowing smoothly [2d]
- Versatile enzyme that quickly, accurately synthesizes RNA can also perform reverse transcription [2d]
- Hubble captures light show around rapidly dying star [2d]
- Historically Black colleges and universities do more than offer Black youths opportunity [2d]
- Taxing Africa's informal economies: Technology's promise and pitfalls [2d]
- The seductive simplicity—and danger—of pop psychology's 'love languages' [2d]
- Breeding a better cucumber: New genetic map reveals 171,892 structural variants [2d]
- When blackouts occur during heat waves, Austin homes pose major risk [2d]
- Exploring how the immune system detects drugs coated with 'stealth' polymers [2d]
- AI model uses molecular energy to predict the most stable atom arrangements [2d]
- Making every identity count: Free tool developed for better handling of identity data in research surveys [2d]
- Fossil discovery suggests giant pythons once roamed Taiwan [2d]
- From principles to practice: What students want from diversity education [2d]
- Impulse and inhibition: The complex ways bilingual brains balance reason with emotion [2d]
- Sea lion camera reveals mother taking pup on educational foraging expedition in the wild [2d]
- The most prevalent disability in classrooms may be fetal alcohol spectrum disorder—and supporting students is vital [2d]
- AI isn't likely to wipe out all farming jobs—but it is changing who bears the risks [2d]
- Rules of unknown board game from the Roman period revealed [2d]
- Study explores how women in public sector regulate their emotions at work [2d]
- Study finds nearly half of Latin America's crop pesticides are banned in EU [2d]
- Female scientists wait longer to have papers published in life and biomedical sciences [2d]
- AI-generated arguments are persuasive—even when labeled [2d]
- Current flows without heat loss in newly engineered fractional quantum material [2d]
- Novel nanosheets boost clot clearing while limiting systemic bleeding [2d]
- Video: Can robots help save farming? [2d]
- Chang'e-6 samples constrain lunar impact flux and illuminate early impact history [2d]
- Launch to ISS delayed again over weather: NASA [2d]
- US to scrap cornerstone of climate regulation this week [2d]
- Discovery of a possible pulsar in the Milky Way's center could enable unprecedented tests of General Relativity [2d]
- AI is reshaping how entrepreneurs think and adapt, study suggests [2d]
- A possible first-ever Einstein probe observation of a black hole tearing apart a white dwarf [2d]
- Q&A: Expert discusses the 'gay voice' stereotype [2d]
- Moving beyond money to measure the true value of Earth science information [2d]
- Silent witnesses: Pets offer a fur-ensic tale [2d]
- When heat flows backwards: A neat solution for hydrodynamic heat transport [2d]
- Football-sized fossil creature may have been one of the first land animals to eat plants [2d]
- Machine learning reveals hidden landscape of robust information storage [2d]
- How your worldview can affect the Earth through three values [2d]
- Mauled by a bear, 27,500 years ago: What a lavish teen burial reveals [2d]
- Plants and worms harnessed to improve sustainable urban drainage systems [2d]
- Planting tree belts on wet farmland comes with an overlooked trade-off [2d]
- Fruit fly study reveals how mating triggers behavioral changes in females [2d]
- Non-biologic processes don't fully explain Mars organics collected by Curiosity, researchers say [2d]
- How giant galaxies could form just 1.4 billion years after the Big Bang [2d]
- Experiment relies on pulsars to probe dark matter waves [2d]
- Fermi data help refine orbital parameters of a gamma-ray binary [2d]
- China's emissions policies are helping climate change but also creating a new problem [2d]
- Dogs and cats help spread an invasive flatworm species, study reveals [2d]
- Can ESG ratings be trusted? Study examines the fight against greenwashing [2d]
- January was fifth hottest on record despite cold snap: EU monitor [2d]
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