The Brutalist Report - science
- Bright children from poorer backgrounds twice as likely to receive mental health treatment than affluent high-achievers [146d]
- Watching how accessory proteins regulate filament growth in real time [146d]
- Study charts path for low-emission corn farming across the globe [146d]
- AI assessment indicates stress levels in farmed Amazonian fish [146d]
- Cooperation and competition: How fetal and maternal cells evolved to work together [146d]
- Videos show how high-speed tongues of salamanders and chameleons are helping unlock engineering breakthroughs [146d]
- Male monarchs throughout history portrayed as 'mother' figures, new research reveals [146d]
- Reproductive flexibility in sharks and rays complicates conservation predictions [146d]
- Robot matches humans in scouting for vineyard diseases [146d]
- Streaming video-on-demand episodes gradually boosts consumers' searches, subscription rates [146d]
- Old tires find new life: Rubber particles strengthen superhydrophobic coatings against corrosion [146d]
- Offspring of parasite-exposed crustaceans face increased mortality despite mothers faring well [146d]
- Balzan prizes of nearly $1 million awarded for democracy studies and advances in leukemia treatment [146d]
- High-pressure electrolysis sustainably converts captured CO₂ into industrial-grade ethylene [146d]
- How climatic factors impact wood formation at the cellular level in the Hengduan Mountains [146d]
- Core technology developed for ultra-high-resolution quantum dot displays [146d]
- Inkjet-style technique developed to produce high-sensitivity biosensors [146d]
- Quantum dot and polymer cross-linking enables 50% stretch capability for micro-LED displays [146d]
- Advanced underwater technology reveals a new species of deep-sea snailfish [146d]
- Scientists uncover a clean, natural process that nourishes rivers, supports fish and honors innovation [146d]
- Tracking plastic in the deep sea: How the Levant Basin became a sink for packaging waste [146d]
- Stem cell–based embryo models reveal pathway to understanding fertility [147d]
- From layered transition metal oxide to 2D material: Scientists make 2H-NbO₂ discovery [147d]
- The world's most famous greater gliders are parents again [147d]
- Plants that dominate at home often thrive as invasive species abroad, study suggests [147d]
- Suite of models shows some positive effects of climate-smart ag practices [147d]
- 'Optical sieve' detects the smallest pieces of plastic in the environment more easily than ever before [147d]
- Students in England and Australia are supposedly poor at learning languages. Our research shows this isn't true [147d]
- Arctic communities face rapid changes in technology and transportation [147d]
- Research reveals hidden damage caused by heat [147d]
- Tiny chip can sort and count nanoplastics for better pollution monitoring [147d]
- Helping teens navigate online racism—study shows which parenting strategy works best [147d]
- Our understanding of lightning has been driven by fear and shaped by curiosity [147d]
- Extending the existing theory on host–microbiome evolution [147d]
- Physicists devise an idea for lasers that shoot beams of neutrinos [147d]
- A new way to control terahertz light for faster electronics [147d]
- Shedding light on insulators: How light pulses unfreeze electrons [147d]
- Strong tides speed melting of Antarctic ice shelves [147d]
- AI tool built for learners supports learning better than ChatGPT [147d]
- AI and climate change: How to reliably record greenhouse gas emissions [147d]
- The science of spaghetti: Neutron scattering explains why gluten-free pasta falls apart [147d]
- Report shows top 400 richest Americans now taxed less than general population [147d]
- Emotions expressed in real-time barrage comments relate to purchasing intentions and imitative behavior [147d]
- Boosting timber harvesting in national forests while cutting public oversight won't solve America's wildfire problem [147d]
- Why building nature-centric housing involves a mindset shift [147d]
- 50 years ago, NASA sent two spacecraft to search for life on Mars. The missions' findings are still discussed today [147d]
- Why the East Antarctic interior is warming faster and earlier than its coastal areas [147d]
- As world gets hotter, Americans are turning to more sugar, study finds [147d]
- France's racial blind spot exposed in new study [147d]
- Corporate reports miss the mark on ocean health, according to new analysis [147d]
- Cities need trees, but sometimes they have to be cut down. Here's why, and how to do it properly [147d]
- Genetic fingerprint approach enhances detection of gene-edited organisms [147d]
- Ocean warming puts vital marine microbe Prochlorococcus at risk [147d]
- Baby turtles vanish into the Indian Ocean for years: Now a model shows where they might go [147d]
- Animal remains suggest first modern humans in central Iberian Peninsula were expert hunters [147d]
- Reusable nanocomposite unites adsorption and photocatalysis for advanced wastewater treatment [147d]
- Young children are not the main drivers of language change, theoretical study suggests [147d]
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