The Brutalist Report - science
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- No new articles in the Past 6 Hours.
- When NASA's experimental technology detects a tsunami, it may help save lives [115d]
- Yes, AI could boost productivity, but work is about more than maximizing output [115d]
- Why a canceled meeting feels so liberating [116d]
- In Hollywood, teams don't stick together long enough to learn from failure, data reveal [116d]
- Research suggests negative emotions at work can help, depending on leaders' empathy [116d]
- Adding 1,000 immigrants tied to 142 more health workers, fewer elderly deaths [116d]
- Drought spurs rise in antibiotic-resistant soil microbes [116d]
- Male bats sing in the rotor-swept zone of wind turbines, potentially raising collision risk [116d]
- Biosensor detects early fungal outbreaks, advances plant biotechnology [116d]
- Shift in key cosmic inflation measurement could be a statistical artifact [116d]
- Euthanasia rates for stray dogs triple as more animals enter UK shelters [116d]
- Gran Dolina site at Atapuerca reveals almost exclusive use of local chert 400,000 years ago [116d]
- New findings on the first steps in protein synthesis [116d]
- Single-cell sequencing reveals unexpected protist diversity [116d]
- Why cultivating drought-resistant plants disappoints: Soil physics may be the real bottleneck [116d]
- A sudden surge in luminosity: Stacked dyes hint at brighter organic semiconductors [116d]
- Chaos as a matter of direction: Researchers build layered material where order and disorder coexist [116d]
- From slices to whole bodies: How 3D cell atlases could reshape pathology research [116d]
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