The Brutalist Report - science
- Generative AI bias poses risk to democratic values, research suggests [378d]
- Ghana cocoa cultivation study finds sustainability certificates boost income but not biodiversity [378d]
- How flooding soybeans in early reproductive stages impacts yield and seed composition [378d]
- Q&A: A global economist discusses how tariffs could hurt American consumers [378d]
- Language models can improve physics measurements with improved tau reconstruction [378d]
- How digital marketing has boosted business in Laos [378d]
- Spinning or not spinning? Experts discuss controversies of Sr₂RuO₄'s unusual superconductivity [378d]
- Good immune functions could enhance cow milk quality and health [378d]
- Vulnerable communities face compounded environmental hazards, study shows [378d]
- Biochar key to new method for recovery of vital phosphorus from sewage sludge [378d]
- Hidden images in Jackson Pollock paintings may have been intentional, argues study [378d]
- Thousands of tiny, time-aware sensors can collectively map chemical concentrations within narrow tubes [378d]
- Building a circular future: Study reveals key organizational capabilities for sustainability [378d]
- Climate change puts African cocoa production under pressure [378d]
- Satellite data analysis uncovers top 10 persistent methane sources [378d]
- Research identifies migration, housing quality as risk factors in earthquake deaths [378d]
- Most Americans oppose detaining sick undocumented immigrants but support post-treatment detention [378d]
- Women speak 3,000 more words daily than men during midlife, study shows [378d]
- Is there life out there? The existence of other technological species is highly likely [378d]
- How a twin Earth could detect Earth [378d]
- Metal alloy shows practically no thermal expansion over extremely large temperature interval [378d]
- Parents' math anxiety linked to lower numeracy skills in children [378d]
- Neutron isotropy measurements validate sheared-flow-stabilized Z pinches for stable thermal fusion [378d]
- Illuminating the elements under our feet: Laser tool offers insights into plant growth and soil health [378d]
- Study estimates the cost of preventing extinction of Australia's priority species [378d]
- Bonobos realize when humans miss information and communicate accordingly [378d]
- Climate warming leads to more frequent tree reproduction at expense of growth, long-term study suggests [379d]
- Online performance reviews: How technology has changed manners and etiquette [379d]
- Multiple earthquakes are rattling Greece's volcanic island of Santorini. Here's what we know [379d]
- 1 in 4 children receive services from children's social care services before turning 18 [379d]
- Temperature, rainfall and tides speed glacier flow on a daily basis [379d]
- How dengue virus infections hijack human plasmin [379d]
- NZ's gene technology reform carries benefits and risks—a truly independent regulator will be vital [379d]
- Most crossbred beef-dairy calves display heartier constitutions than purebreds, study finds [379d]
- Short and sweet: Supportive texts give partners a boost [379d]
- While plastic dominates human consumption, the global economy will remain hooked on fossil fuels [379d]
- How political polarization informed Mexico's protests against femicide [379d]
- Education in Zimbabwe has lost its value: Study asks young people how they feel about that [379d]
- What's driving north Queensland's deadly, record-breaking floods? [379d]
- Complex model of molecular 'wear-and-tear' shines light on how proteins age [379d]
- Burkina Faso's nature reserves are worth protecting—but people have to be part of the plan [379d]
- Radioactive dust from March 2022 Saharan dust storm was not of French origin, study finds [379d]
- Barbecue grill approach helps researchers understand puzzling Rayleigh–Bloch waves [379d]
- Study finds improved treatment timing reduces honey bee losses to Varroa mites [379d]
- Unveiling ethnic hiring discrimination in Australia during the COVID-19 pandemic [379d]
- Lake beds are rich environmental records—studying them reveals much about a place's history [379d]
- Fossil shark teeth are abundant and can date the past in a unique way [379d]
- Students cheating with generative AI reflects a revenue-driven post-secondary sector [379d]
- New genus and species within Ornithomimidae dinosaur family identified in Mexico [379d]
- The weird psychology of airports [379d]
- Drought can hit almost anywhere: How five cities that nearly ran dry got water use under control [379d]
- Famine as political violence: 'There is food, but no access to food' [379d]
- Property and sovereignty in space − as countries and companies take to the stars, they could run into disputes [379d]
- Australia spends $714 per person on roads every year—but just 90 cents goes to walking, wheeling and cycling [379d]
- Poison baits were used on 1,400 feral cats, foxes and dingoes. We studied their fate to see what works [379d]
- Could AI kill human creativity? [379d]
- Global internet grid could better detect earthquakes with new algorithm [379d]
- Mount Rainier white-tailed ptarmigan finally receives a 'threatened' species designation [379d]
- An upgraded Alvin puts new ocean depths within reach [379d]
- Tiny endangered Chilean froglets are born in London after a mission to save them from extinction [379d]
- Portable tests deliver plant disease results in under 30 minutes [379d]
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