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Science News

Location American Science News for 18 June 2020

OpenAI's New Text Generator Writes Even More Like a Human

Singularity Hub - 18 Jun 2020 16:00
OpenAI's New Text Generator Writes Even More Like a Human In early 2019 OpenAI, a startup co-founded by Elon Musk devoted to ensuring artificial general intelligence is safe for humanity, announced it had created a neural network for natural language processing called GPT-2. In...
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(Michigan State University Facility for Rare Isotope Beams) Five Michigan State University researchers from the Facility for Rare Isotope Beams and the Department of Statistics and Probability are participating in a new ...
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More than 5 million years ago, North America was home to the only rodents to ever have horns on their noses - and they may have evolved them to defend against predators
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Clear signs of brain injury with severe COVID-19

Neuroscience News - 18 Jun 2020 21:52
Clear signs of brain injury with severe COVID-19 Some coronavirus patients exhibit clinical and neurochemical signs of brain injury associated with the viral infection. COVID-19 patients who required ventilation had increased plasma NfL levels. The higher NfL concentra...
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Suicide rate for people with schizophrenia spectrum disorders 170 times higher Suicide rates for those with schizophrenia spectrum disorders (SSD) are 170 times higher than the general population. Suicide risk is predicted by key factors including age, evidence of mood disorders and hospitalization...
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A 110-year-old measles genome has helped date the origin of the disease to about 500 BC, which is roughly when humans began living in cities with large populations
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Tainted sexual enhancement supplements linked with dangerously low blood sugar in 17 men The outbreak occurred in Virginia men who bought the supplement from local convenient stores.
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Indigenous communities in the Peruvian Amazon have contracted covid-19, and the disease could reach uncontacted tribes, which are particularly vulnerable
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Person who had measles 100 years ago helps scientists trace origins of virus A preserved lung helped scientists rewrite the virus's history.
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The latest coronavirus news updated every day including coronavirus cases, the latest news, features and interviews from New Scientist and essential information about the covid-19 pandemic
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Ancient Antarctic sea monster may have laid this football-size egg Chilean scientists nicknamed the fossil "The Thing" after a 1982 sci-fi movie based in Antarctica.
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Scientists create a pattern so complicated it's impossible to duplicate Scientists just created a pattern that, according to researchers, is impossible to duplicate or forge, a feat that could quash counterfeiters.
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The algorithms that ride-hailing companies such as Uber use to determine fare prices appear to set higher prices for non-white neighbourhoods
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Exploring mass dependence in electron-hole clusters In solid materials, when an electron changes position without another to fill its place, a positively charged 'hole' can appear which is attracted to the original electron. In more complex situations, the process can eve...
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Science On the Hill: Calculating Climate

Scientific American - 18 Jun 2020 17:35
Science On the Hill: Calculating Climate For the fourth Science on the Hill event, "Future Climate: What We Know, What We Don't", experts talked with Scientific American senior editor Mark Fischetti about what goes into modeling... --
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Quantum rings in the grip of laser light

Phys.org - 18 Jun 2020 17:18
Quantum rings in the grip of laser light Ultracold atoms trapped in appropriately prepared optical traps can arrange themselves in surprisingly complex, hitherto unobserved structures, according to scientists from the Institute of Nuclear Physics of the Polish ...
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Read a free issue of All About History magazine

Live Science - 18 Jun 2020 16:14
Read a free issue of All About History magazine All About History magazine is offering a free issue to
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Famous Irish tomb yields a surprise -- a king born of brother-sister incest Human bones in the famous Newgrange tomb in Ireland belonged to king born of first-degree incest, researchers say.
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The monstrous 'blobs' near Earth's core may be even bigger than we thought Using thousands of seismic wave recordings, researchers mapped the mysterious 'blobs' deep below the Pacific Ocean and found they are even bigger than imagined.
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Researchers perform quantum simulation of dynamical phase transitions Quantum simulation uses a controllable quantum system to mimic complex systems or solve intractable problems, among which the non-equilibrium problems of quantum many-body systems have attracted wide research interest. S...
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Massive underwater rivers were discovered off the coast of Australia Massive, underwater rivers have been discovered hidden off Australia's coasts by robotic ocean gliders.
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'Exploding Whale Memorial Park' honors whale that went out with a bang A new park in Oregon gets its name from an explosive event in 1970: the dynamiting of a dead, beached sperm whale.
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