The Brutalist Report - science
- Disrupting Asxl1 gene prevents T-cell exhaustion, improving immunotherapy [221d]
- Scientists cut harmful pollution from hydrogen engines [221d]
- Researchers create the first ever visualization of photoexcited charges traveling across the interface of two semiconductor materials [221d]
- How your skin tone could affect your meds [221d]
- It could take over 40 years for PFAS to leave groundwater [221d]
- Research advances infusion designed to clean arteries [221d]
- UNH helps community document skeletal remains found on historic 'poor farm' [221d]
- A look into 'mirror molecules' may lead to new medicines [221d]
- Magnetically regulated gene therapy tech offers precise brain-circuit control [221d]
- 'Islands' of regularity discovered in the famously chaotic three-body problem [221d]
- Spike in emergency visits for life threatening pregnancy complication, study suggests [221d]
- Red milkweed beetle genome offers insight into plant-insect interactions [221d]
- The cause of the genome's most common mutation has been reassigned [221d]
- Ordered defects may be key for solution-deposited semiconductors, enabling high-speed printable circuits and next-generation displays [221d]
- Students who feel more university connection may be more likely to binge drink, study finds [221d]
- Bilingualism makes the brain more efficient, especially when learned at a young age [221d]
- Lightning strikes kick off a game of electron pinball in space [221d]
- Declines in plant resilience threaten carbon storage in the Arctic [221d]
- How playing songs to Darwin's finches helped biologists confirm link between environment and the emergence of new species [221d]
- A holy grail found for catalytic alkane activation [221d]
- Loss of lake ice has wide-ranging environmental and societal consequences [221d]
- How a bunch of seemingly disorganized cells go on to form a robust embryo [221d]
- Variability in when and how cells divide promotes healthy development in embryos [221d]
- Hidden biological processes can affect how the ocean stores carbon [221d]
- Maternal exercise during pregnancy may protect the child against asthma [221d]
- Glowing approach could aid carpal tunnel-related surgery [221d]
- New drug approach could underpin future weight loss therapies, study indicates [221d]
- A stiff material that stops vibrations and noise [221d]
- Extreme rainfall poses health risks [221d]
- Heart failure, atrial fibrillation and coronary heart disease linked to cognitive impairment [221d]
- To make children better fact-checkers, expose them to more misinformation -- with oversight [221d]
- Simulation mimics how the brain grows neurons, paving the way for future disease treatments [221d]
- Catastrophically warm predictions are more plausible than we thought [221d]
- Understanding how smiling influences relationship building during real-life conversations [221d]
- Human cell culture model of lung's most important immune cells [221d]
- Failed waste policy: We burn more and recycle less than we think [221d]
- Faulty 'fight or flight' response drives deadly C. difficile infections, research reveals [221d]
- Checking out the boundaries: Milestone in lipidomics achieved [221d]
- Fossils and fires: Insights into early modern human activity in the jungles of Southeast Asia [222d]
- Advanced model predicts gene architecture via nucleosome position [221d]
- How personal care products affect indoor air quality [221d]
- Claustrophobic cells slow their own growth, forming beautiful patterns of concentric circles [221d]
- Study: Disappointment, not hatred is driving polarization in the states [221d]
- Key gene discovered for regulating rice grain length [221d]
- Benchmarking study aims to assist scientists in analyzing spatial transcriptomics data [221d]
- New nanotherapy targets artery inflammation in cardiovascular disease [221d]
- Phytoplankton community shifts after wastewater treatment plant closure [221d]
- Researchers find Norway's waste policy falls short of goals [221d]
- Research team helps community document skeletal remains found on historic 'poor farm' [221d]
- A look into 'mirror molecules' may lead to new medicines [221d]
- Astronomers find Webb data conflict with reionization models [221d]
- Signaling pathway discovery could lead to faster, more reliable human stem cell differentiation [221d]
- Researchers develop technique that enables breeding of genetically identical hybrid plants [221d]
- Deleting your Facebook may increase your well-being but reduce your political knowledge [221d]
- Weever stings provide scientists with a unique way of assessing impacts of environment on coastal fish populations [221d]
- Targeting 'selfish' bacteria could optimize inhibitors that fight antibiotic resistance [221d]
- Asteroid mining: A potential trillion-dollar industry [221d]
- First greenhouse gas plumes detected with NASA-designed instrument [221d]
- Extreme floods, like those caused by Hurricane Helene, are becoming more frequent [221d]
- Threatened pink sea fan coral breeds in UK aquarium for first time [221d]
- New analysis tools can help farmers make informed choice on 'agrivoltaics' [221d]
- Geologist helps track lead pollution in a Tibetan glacier, revealing global impact of human activities [221d]
- Landscape effects of hunter-gatherer practices reshape idea of agriculture [221d]
- High-resolution structural data shows how a supercomplex links mRNA translation and decay [221d]
- Study of young African American men in US cities finds negative perspectives of community, few opportunities [221d]
- Using AI to predict climate-driven migration [221d]
- Biased metrics threaten climate investment where it's needed most, researchers warn [221d]
- Researchers regulate microenvironment in boron-imidazolate frameworks to enhance CO₂ electroreduction to C₂H₄ [221d]
- 'Islands' of regularity discovered in the famously chaotic three-body problem [221d]
- Solar storm could impact US hurricane recovery efforts: Agency [221d]
- What yields per acre reveal about the impact of extreme weather [221d]
- Study finds it could take over 40 years to flush PFAS out of groundwater [221d]
- Measures to restore biodiversity in peatlands fall short, study finds [221d]
- Genetic tweaks show potential for making oats more nutritious and increasing shelf life [221d]
- Uncrackable: Scorpions and sponges inspire sustainable design [221d]
- Red milkweed beetle genome offers evolutionary insights into plant-insect interactions [221d]
- These five 'post-truth' claims are fueling the water wars in Australia [221d]
- Climate change can alter methane emission and uptake in the Amazon [221d]
- A new plasma-based technological design boosts graphene production by more than 22% [221d]
- AI-driven approach challenges traditional views on protein structure [221d]
- From chaos to structure: How a bunch of seemingly disorganized cells go on to form a robust embryo [221d]
- European forest plants are migrating westwards: Research suggests nitrogen is the main cause [221d]
- Microscopic marine organisms can create parachute-like mucus structures that stall CO₂ absorption from atmosphere [221d]
- Innovative approach to catalytic alkane activation offers new chemical pathways [221d]
- Loss of lake ice has wide-ranging environmental and societal consequences, analysis suggests [221d]
- Playing songs to Darwin's finches helps confirm link between environmental change and emergence of new species [221d]
- Distant planet may host volcanic moon like Jupiter's Io [221d]
- Chagos Islands: How to ensure their coral reefs aren't damaged as they return to Mauritius [221d]
- Catastrophically warm predictions are more plausible than previously thought, say climate scientists [221d]
- Yes, nature is complex—but saving our precious environment means finding ways to measure it [221d]
- How did magma oceans evolve on early Earth and Mars? Iron chemistry and primordial atmospheres offer clues [221d]
- Novel visible light communication encryption technology uses chiral nanoparticles [221d]
- Space isn't all about the 'race'—rival superpowers must work together for a better future [221d]
- Assessment of damaged archaeological sites suggests they require individual protection concepts [221d]
- 'Cajun Navy' hurricane search-and-rescue volunteers are forming long-lasting organizations [222d]
- New discoveries: Three tiny species added to South Africa's spectacular marine life [222d]
- Dark energy: Could the mysterious force we think of as constant actually vary over cosmic time? [222d]
- Spectroscopy study determines how catalysts remove dangerous nitrogen oxides [222d]
- Scientists track and analyze lofted embers that cause spot fires [222d]
- Scientists explore whether smaller chromosomes lead to more segregation errors during egg cell division [222d]
- Declines in plant resilience threaten carbon storage in the Arctic [222d]
- Increasing plant diversity in agriculture can promote soil carbon sequestration [222d]
- Direction of the Alpine Fault's last big quake will help NZ prepare for the inevitable next rupture [222d]
- Fall is here: Why do some trees lose their leaves while others stay green? [222d]
- World's highest-voltage gun accelerates electrons from zero to 80% the speed of light [222d]
- How the 'social cost of carbon' measurement can hide economic inequalities and mask climate suffering [222d]
- Huge waves in the atmosphere dump extreme rain on northern Australia [222d]
- Trial results set benchmark for future clinical applications of lipidomic technologies [222d]
- 'Overwhelmed, hopeless, crushed': Australian report reveals how housing crisis is reshaping young people's lives [222d]
- Survey reveals Australians' lukewarm response to urgent action on global heating [222d]
- Earning an associate degree has varying value for workers based on demographics, researchers find [222d]
- Rental crisis in regional cities prompts rethinking of moves [222d]
- An independent panel reports findings into loss of marine life off the North East and Yorkshire coast [222d]
- Male CEOs viewed positively for assertive activism stances, study reveals [222d]
- The unintended consequences of brick-and-mortar's decline [222d]
- How climate change is powering stronger hurricanes [222d]
- Transnational grief: Adding depth to Day of the Dead [222d]
- Rage clicks: Study shows how political outrage fuels social media engagement [222d]
- Archive tells of cracking ancient Greek language [222d]
- Poverty-level wages pose urgent problem for US childcare, study finds [222d]
- Scientists recreate sound of Earth's magnetic flip 41,000 years ago [222d]
- Animal social interactions could speed up evolution [222d]
- Advanced technology discovered under Neolithic dwelling in Denmark [222d]
- Hurricane Milton tornadoes kill four in Florida amid rescue efforts [222d]
- Hurricane Milton shreds Florida stadium roof [222d]
- Study shows neonicotinoids are harmful to birds on all fronts [222d]
- Scientists accelerate uranium beam with record power [222d]
- Inspired by Spider-Man, researchers recreate web-slinging technology [222d]
- Three reasons why teachers should learn to meditate, and it's not (just) about well-being [222d]
- Biomolecular condensates can split membranes without the aid of proteins, study finds [222d]
- Lighting the way with accurate and safe 3D embryo imaging [222d]
- Non-Indigenous businesses struggling to boost Indigenous staff numbers [222d]
- Researchers discover new isotope plutonium-227 [222d]
- Barnacle-inspired polymers could present new way to design antibiotics, researchers say [222d]
- A sharper view of the Milky Way with Gaia and machine learning [222d]
- Genetic mechanism unlocks a key secret behind disease infection in crops [222d]
- Theoretical study demonstrates existence of giant photocaloric effects in ferroelectric perovskites [222d]
- Amazon rainforest near tipping point partly driven by UK consumers, WWF says [222d]
- Northern lights may be visible in much of upper US on Thursday, Friday [222d]
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