The Brutalist Report - science
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- No new articles in the Past 24 Hours.
- Guidance aims to improve collaboration between scientists, tribal nations [1d]
- Drought parches Florida [1d]
- Climate change does not polarize opinions: 'In fact, we are increasingly in agreement' [2d]
- Swipe right? Dating apps linked to body image pressures [2d]
- 'Vegan leather' isn't as sustainable or eco‑friendly as brands might claim [2d]
- 'We are living with disinformation. We are not going to eradicate it,' global expert argues [2d]
- Turmeric and ginger extract may boost implant bonding and kill 92% bacteria [2d]
- Earthrise to Earthset: How the planet's climate has changed since the photo that inspired the environmental movement [2d]
- Light-driven method enables sustainable production of porous semiconducting polymers [2d]
- US plans tariffs up to 100% on some brand-name drugs [2d]
- 'Oldest octopus' fossil is no octopus at all, scans reveal [2d]
- Expert explains how AI could redefine the scope of engineering work [2d]
- AI is reengineering drug discovery by speeding up testing and scanning petabytes of data [2d]
- This protein helps cancer cells survive treatment—and points to new treatments [2d]
- Molecular editing tool relocates alcohol groups to neighboring sites while preserving 3D structure [2d]
- Planting trees to remove carbon can harm the environment or protect it: Study highlights trade‑offs [2d]
- Molecular 'leash' measures force-sensing protein activation at about 15 piconewtons [2d]
- African frogs haven't forgotten the ice ages. Scientists can tell by where they live. [2d]
- New study reveals why housing booms and busts are built into the system [2d]
- Researchers clarify how cells remove damaged endoplasmic reticulum [2d]
- Fly ball: Drosophila can learn while playing with tiny spheres [2d]
- Would you spread pain to be fair? fMRI study tests moral choices in ice water [2d]
- Schrödinger's carbon: The hidden uncertainty in every net-zero plan [2d]
- The hidden workload behind burnout: Why unpaid work may worsen women's mental health [2d]
- When trees get 'sunburn': Study shows how young trees can handle the heat [2d]
- Experiment indicates new type of mesic nuclei that could reveal how matter acquires mass [2d]
- Who got the meat? What 10,000 years of European bones suggest about diet inequality [2d]
- Phengite identified as key carrier of halogens into Earth's deep mantle [2d]
- How stem cell descendants preserve flexibility while maintaining distinct identities [2d]
- What this AI epitope library means for vaccines, immunotherapy and biosensors [2d]
- Parabolic flight test shows lasers can propel graphene aerogels in microgravity [2d]
- 3D microscopy reveals how a tick-borne virus reshapes human cells to replicate [2d]
- New spider species in the Amazon mimics parasitic fungus [2d]
- Social honey bees stay cool: How groups mitigate heat-triggered hormone spikes [2d]
- Online PFAS information from public sources can fall short and leave public without enough guidance, study reveals [2d]
- Metamaterial chains learn new shapes by sharing data hinge to hinge [2d]
- Teachers tend to help the same kids repeatedly when using AI-powered tutoring tools [2d]
- Drones, DNA, and weather: A phase-oriented hybrid engine predicts sugar beet disease [2d]
- Bird flu spread could be impacted by where waterfowl like to live [2d]
- Network analysis reveals mammal food web drivers across Africa [2d]
- From decades-long studies of humble grasses, new clues to climate resistance [2d]
- Ranks of Disparity: New approach fixes flaw in fairness algorithms [2d]
- Rich biodiversity found in Japan's deepest ocean trenches, including an unidentified 'mystery' species [2d]
- Students prefer AI chatbots, until they know it is one [2d]
- Why AI shouldn't be used even to decide 'simple' court cases [2d]
- More than a pretty picture, star-shaped nanomaterial changes energy storage [2d]
- Early humans in South Africa were quarrying stone as far back as 220,000 years ago [2d]
- New leading cause of tree death in US northeast shifts from logging to natural causes [2d]
- Born to roam, built for home: New genomic insights for snapper fisheries [2d]
- Ak4 regulates mitochondrial DNA synthesis to control macrophage antibacterial activity, research finds [2d]
- How microbes survive in the plastisphere [2d]
- First close pair of supermassive black holes detected [2d]
- How Jupiter cultivated more large moons than Saturn [2d]
- 'Voorhees law' explains why the slower car often catches up [2d]
- How the social lives of magpies shape their call repertoire [2d]
- Reducing risks when modernizing packaging [2d]
- Green skepticism indirectly reduces intention to purchase sustainable products, says study [2d]
- A layered approach sharpens brain signals in optical imaging [2d]
- Why we're skeptical of the emotions we see on our screens [2d]
- New Artemis II 'Earthset' shot revisits Apollo 8's iconic 'Earthrise,' 57 years on [2d]
- Tech can enable cross-species experiences, new research suggests [2d]
- 15 years after the eradication of rinderpest, lessons still ring true [2d]
- Oyster reefs stack up for shoreline protection [2d]
- Do you see faces in the clouds? Researchers examine pareidolia [2d]
- Quantum computing without interruptions [2d]
- Matcha model makes drug candidate screening more than 30 times faster [2d]
- Hot-dry extremes could hit 28% of humanity five times more often by end of century [2d]
- Astronomers discover Andromeda XXXVI, an ultra-faint dwarf satellite galaxy [2d]
- Natural disasters trigger 69% surge in public protests across Latin America, research finds [2d]
- 'Morale boost': NASA carries out Moon mission during tough year for science [2d]
- Water on the moon? New study narrows down the mostly likely locations [2d]
- Artemis astronauts survey lunar surface on flyby, solar eclipse up next [2d]
- After milestone-rich lunar flyby, astronauts start trip home [2d]
- Lunar crater named after Artemis commander's deceased wife [2d]
- Artemis astronauts pass behind moon, expected communications cut starts [2d]
- Laughter, tears: Historic day for astronaut Jenni Gibbons in Houston [2d]
- GMO pictures may reinforce existing views, deepening the divide of attitudes towards them [2d]
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