The Brutalist Report - science
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- No new articles in the Past 24 Hours.
- 4,000-year-old texts to reach new audiences in digital project [1d]
- Can houseplants really purify the air in your home? What the science actually says [1d]
- AI tool unifies fragmented cell maps into spatial atlases across tissues [1d]
- New AI solution developed for smarter urban and climate planning [1d]
- From pantry to pest control: Garlic kills the mood for mosquitoes as well [1d]
- For years, reading struggles seemed obvious. This massive analysis points to a very different cause [1d]
- Sharper brains switch to a 'not what you know, but who you know' mindset online and on social media, study shows [1d]
- Mechanical method unlocks sunlight-driven wastewater cleanup [1d]
- Harmless viruses trap Salmonella on flexible polymer in portable microfluidic sensor [1d]
- Scientists uncover hidden parasite diversity in barb fish from the Sea of Galilee [1d]
- Pilot whales are already 'shouting' at full volume, but one busy waterway is pushing them to the edge [1d]
- The 'nostalgia effect': Scientists produce less disruptive work as they age [1d]
- How soil bacteria help plants defend themselves against disease [1d]
- Novel nanoparticle therapy using manganese could improve cancer treatment [1d]
- Ultrasound waves rupture COVID-19 and flu viruses without damaging cells [1d]
- A targeted 'off switch' in a plant's egg cell speeds up the breeding process [1d]
- Ancient soil temperatures may have steered millet farming across Neolithic East Asia [1d]
- Ultrahigh-energy cosmic messengers may carry ultraheavy secrets [1d]
- Next-gen Mars helicopter rotor blades exceed Mach 1 [1d]
- Climate-driven extreme fire danger cannot be prevented by carbon neutrality alone, study warns [1d]
- Gaming monkeys' curiosity: Japanese macaques actively explore moderately uncertain stimuli [1d]
- Q&A: The political calculus—and actual math—of gerrymandering [1d]
- More than one in three Norwegian dogs shows signs of tick-borne disease [1d]
- Quantum metallurgy: Electron crystals deform and melt [1d]
- Theoretical framework can predict how complex networks behave [1d]
- How missing information can misinform [1d]
- Tax cuts, access and quality of life shape startup-friendly smart cities [1d]
- Why workplace change keeps failing: New framework says structure, not mindset, may be the real barrier [1d]
- Modern experiments suggest rhino teeth may have been part of Neanderthal toolkits [1d]
- Researchers combine five metals to build a better nanocrystal [1d]
- Every dollar spent on forest fuel treatments saves $3.75 in wildfire damages, study finds [1d]
- Myanmar's devastating quake could reshape how California and other fault zones gauge future risk [1d]
- Trafficked pangolin DNA reveals hotspots of illegal wildlife trade [1d]
- Why plant extinctions may rise by 2100 even if species keep shifting ranges [1d]
- Thawing Arctic soil awakens only half of soil microbes, new study reveals [1d]
- Scientists unlock fungi's secret chemistry, offering a greener path to crop protection [1d]
- LED light unlocks 3D optical fingerprints inside materials without lasers [1d]
- How cells 'back up' DNA replication to survive severe damage [1d]
- How evolution sculpts the facial shapes of birds and mammals [2d]
- Mobile qubits on a chip move us a step closer to everyday quantum computers [2d]
- Photonics advance could enable compact, high-performance lidar sensors [2d]
- When faith meets a melting point: New study warns Hajj pilgrimage is breaching human survivability limits [2d]
- Magnetic checkerboard separates microparticles by size and sends them along different paths [2d]
- Team steers electron spin ballistically in graphene [2d]
- Urban trees cool the world's cities more than we thought—but we can't rely on them alone [2d]
- Ancient sea fossils indicate millipede and centipede ancestors evolved their legs while still underwater [2d]
- Transcribing speech is never neutral—it shapes power and bias [2d]
- Artificial intelligence may accelerate the path to radicalization [2d]
- Countries must back commitments to transition from fossil fuels with action [2d]
- Recreational fishing in the US catches far more fish than previously estimated [2d]
- Archaeologists unearth evidence of dogs being traded within Mayan societies [2d]
- Study seeks to stave off mitochondrial dysfunction believed to cause aging [2d]
- Streetlights trigger bizarre 'death spirals' in thousands of isopods, scientists find [2d]
- Tree communities shape hidden energy flows under European forests [2d]
- Drones match farm planning effectiveness of more expensive tech, study finds [2d]
- Satellite captures a sea of spinning clouds [2d]
- Deforestation lessens Amazon rainfall—and climate change hastens that process, study finds [2d]
- Sexual arousal can lead to tunnel vision, blinding people to rejection cues [2d]
- Brexit did not just shake Britain—it sent financial shockwaves across Europe, research indicates [2d]
- Construction sector adapts to global shocks faster than expected [2d]
- Protecting the future of Southeast Asia's giant clams [2d]
- Testing quantum collapse theory with the XENONnT dark matter detector [2d]
- Properly crediting employees for their ideas is key to building a strong workplace culture, research finds [2d]
- Chilean wasp named in honor of Sir David Attenborough's 100th birthday [2d]
- Ice Age butcher's tools are a sign of ancient humans' creativity during hard times [2d]
- Rapidly melting Antarctic ice shelves may cause global sea levels to rise far faster than expected [2d]
- These monster black holes did not form the usual way—their history of violence is written into spacetime ripples [2d]
- Troubled waters: Jakarta battles deadly, invasive suckerfish [2d]
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