The Brutalist Report - science
- How probation officers—criminal legal system's most diverse group—experience their roles [14d]
- DNA-based neural network learns from examples to solve problems [14d]
- Workplace culture matters as much for organizational performance and staff retention as for employee morale [14d]
- Deep learning method enables efficient Boltzmann distribution sampling across a continuous temperature range [14d]
- Automated tool enables rapid, large-scale profiling of disease-linked RNA modifications [14d]
- Quantum emitter discovery in diamonds enables a new type of coupling [14d]
- A new scale of biology: Massive datasets are aiding in the fight against superbugs [14d]
- New biocatalytic method can generate a library of novel molecules for drug discovery [14d]
- Algorithms that address malicious noise could result in more accurate, dependable quantum computing [14d]
- Nutrient-enriched seagrass can store more carbon, but too much nutrition—especially nitrogen—can be its undoing [14d]
- Chinese scientists reveal hidden extinction crisis in native flora [14d]
- Standardized approach replicates microplastics in the lab with greater precision [14d]
- Decades of data show African weather disturbances intensify during La Niña [14d]
- From longevity to cancer: Understanding the dual nature of polyamines [14d]
- High-throughput phenotyping platform uncovers genetic basis of wheat spike morphology evolution [14d]
- Counterfeit Chanel, Louis Vuitton and Hermès bags from China: An online phenomenon and its risks for consumers [14d]
- Hidden step in hemoglobin's carbon monoxide release challenges long-held assumption [14d]
- Webb reveals warm space dust in far-off Makani galaxy's circumgalactic medium [14d]
- Juno finds final missing auroral signature from Jupiter's largest moons [14d]
- Roll-to-roll method streamlines DNA sequencing with faster, more efficient fluidics [14d]
- The growing threat of vast ravines swallowing streets and homes [14d]
- Plant-based dog foods not nutritionally complete, but may suffice with supplements, study suggests [14d]
- The cling of doom: How staph bacteria latch onto human skin [14d]
- Climate change is making rollercoaster harvests the new normal [14d]
- Corporate effects of protecting biodiversity comes with price tag, study finds [14d]
- Sperm bots roll out: Cells coated with magnetic nanoparticles could transform future of fertility [14d]
- Soot's climate-altering properties change within hours of entering atmosphere [14d]
- Cats can get dementia too. Here are the eight signs to look out for [14d]
- Experimental method successfully resolves five molecules in the same condensate without using fluorescence [14d]
- How measures to protect the environment and reduce the rich–poor divide interact [14d]
- Researchers explore new strategies to develop environmentally safe polymer materials [14d]
- Despite cloudy skies, bees can still use sun for navigation [14d]
- How do bodies decompose? Cape Town forensic scientists are pushing frontiers of new detection methods [14d]
- No credit history? No problem. New research suggests shopping data works as a proxy for creditworthiness [14d]
- Multicenter study shows US hospitals vary greatly in how they define blood culture contamination [14d]
- Marsquakes indicate a solid core for the red planet, just like Earth [14d]
- Lost for 50 years, Nobel patents found in Swedish summer home [14d]
- Mutations driving evolution are informed by the genome, not random, study suggests [14d]
- Five forecasts early climate models got right—the evidence is all around you [14d]
- Trees alone won't save us: New study says forestation has less potential to fix the climate than hoped [14d]
- AI is transforming weather forecasting, and that could be a game changer for farmers around the world [14d]
- Three reasons why the climate crisis must reshape how we think about war [14d]
- From intention to impact: 3 ways men in leadership can build equitable workplaces that work for everyone [14d]
- The hidden cost of reputation-driven science reporting [14d]
- Sugar-coated nanoparticles could target deadly breast cancer [14d]
- Particle detector proves precision as it prepares to probe properties of quark-gluon plasma [14d]
- Half a century ago, the Great Barrier Reef was to be drilled for oil. It was saved—for a time [14d]
- Earth system models' inaccurate gross primary productivity simulations threaten land carbon uptake estimates [14d]
- Researchers find tree growth boosts insect herbivory [14d]
- Gene associated with deadly heart disease in golden retrievers identified [14d]
- Explainable AI supports improved nickel catalyst design for converting carbon dioxide into methane [14d]
- Sensors reveal surprising drop in methane emissions after flooding in coastal wetlands [14d]
- Wading through the noise: New audio tool pinpoints river species [14d]
- Researchers advance technology for protecting engineered cells [14d]
- Competition in the classroom: When incentive systems change character [14d]
- Student care culture in small universities examined [14d]
- New modeling indicates 100-year-old geological theory on the Himalayas may have been wrong all along [14d]
- What the EPA's plan to deregulate greenhouse gas emissions means for Washington state [14d]
- Safe underground carbon storage would only reduce warming by 0.7°C, analysis finds [14d]
- How the Slavic migration reshaped Central and Eastern Europe [14d]
- Fruit fly research shows that mechanical forces drive evolutionary change [14d]
- Mapping an entire subcontinent for sustainable development [14d]
- First brain-wide map of decision-making charted in mice [14d]
- In the Salish Sea, tensions surrounding killer whales and salmon are about more than just fishing [14d]
- Touch reveals what eyes can't see—so museums should embrace interactivity [14d]
- Reluctance to reach out to old friends is a common experience, but reconnecting can pay off [14d]
- Proposed mission could encounter and explore a future interstellar comet like 3I/ATLAS up close [14d]
- Red squirrels show resilience to climate change but still need habitat protection [14d]
- Why AI companions and young people can make for a dangerous mix [14d]
[ai]
- 'We're not your empathy exercise'—reclaiming coproduction in neurodivergent research and practice [14d]
- Desert soils can emit greenhouse gases in minutes—even without microbes [14d]
- The rise of micro weddings: Why couples are saying 'I do' to smaller celebrations [14d]
- Researcher says Gen Z is the 'most investment-savvy generation' [14d]
- 'Major floods and droughts every 15 years': AI forecasts a crisis for Pakistan [14d]
- Opinion: Microbiology needs interdisciplinary early-career teams [14d]
- Proboscis monkeys' big noses boost vocal identity [14d]
- Kindness over coercion: Why derailing bullying early is critical in schools [14d]
- Mapping the lipid blueprint of vertebrate life in 4D [14d]
- 'Roasted alive': Greek wildlife suffers as climate changes [14d]
- Hybrid nanotube electrodes developed for safer brain-machine interfaces [14d]
- Chandra peers into A supernova's troubled heart [14d]
- 'Mob breaker' TRIM37 prevents abnormal cell division by eliminating extra spindle poles [14d]
- To clean fire-tainted soil, LA residents turn to nature to do it themselves [14d]
- How the palmette motif shifted from elite status symbol to royal emblem in Iron Age Judah [14d]
- Crystalline material conducts heat even worse than glass and water—and that's promising [14d]
- UN pushes nations to submit overdue climate plans [14d]
- China endured its hottest summer on record in 2025 [14d]
- Ocean warming projected to stall expected mangrove recovery [14d]
- Seeking a carbon-capture breakthrough: Solar-activated molecules rapidly trap CO₂, pointing to scalable solution [14d]
- Kilauea's on-and-off eruption is back on in Hawaii. What to know about its dramatic lava displays [14d]
- A light-programmable, dynamic ultrasound wavefront [14d]
- Big apple forecast in Michigan has farmers squabbling [14d]
- After viral video of giant manta ray capture, bipartisan Florida lawmakers want change [14d]
- Researchers call for new standards for building in coastal flood zones [14d]
- Fabrication technique opens door to new materials for quantum hardware [14d]
- Global methane levels continue rising as trade and developing regions fuel growth [14d]
- Soft materials hold onto 'memories' of their past for longer than previously thought [14d]
- Starfish break the rules of animal distribution [14d]
- Gray seals perplex scientists with lack of response to flu infection [14d]
- Biologists engineer larger, tougher crops for fuel, bioproducts [14d]
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