Science News
Kate Crawford interview: How AI is exploiting people and the planet
New Scientist - 24 Mar 2021 22:00
Beyond the headline breakthroughs, artificial intelligence is a global industrial complex. Having explored its political and social implications, Kate Crawford at Microsoft Research is now focusing on the infrastructure ...
How Humans Develop Larger Brains Than Other Apes
Neuroscience News - 25 Mar 2021 01:30
Using brain organoid models, researchers have identified how the brain grows much larger and has three times as many neurons, as the brains of chimpanzees and gorillas.
COVID-19 vaccines may not produce sufficient antibody response in transplant recipients
Science Daily - 25 Mar 2021 01:08
When clinical trials were conducted to determine the immunogenicity -- the ability to elicit an immune response -- for the first two vaccines marshaled against SARS-CoV-2the virus that causes COVID-19, one group was not ...
Repurposed Drug Improves Cognition in Alzheimer's Patients
Neuroscience News - 25 Mar 2021 00:37
Sargramostim, a medication that boosts white blood cells following cancer treatment, appears to improve memory and cognition in people with mild-to-moderate Alzheimer's disease.
Higher Education Levels Linked to Greater Well-Being for Women
Neuroscience News - 25 Mar 2021 00:18
Women who embarked on higher education reported better overall psychological well-being, positive affect, and reduced psychological distress.
Mutation-Specific Brain Cancer Vaccine Tested
Neuroscience News - 25 Mar 2021 00:00
Researchers have carried out clinical trials to test a mutation-specific vaccine against malignant brain tumors. The vaccine has been found to be safe and effective in triggering the desired immune response in the brain ...
Shining a healing light on the brain
Science Daily - 24 Mar 2021 23:51
Scientists report a novel noninvasive treatment for brain disorders based on breakthroughs in both optics and genetics. It involves stimulation of neurons by means of radioluminescent nanoparticles injected into the brai...
Zooming in on muscle cells
Science Daily - 24 Mar 2021 23:51
An international team has produced the first high-resolution 3D image of the sarcomere, the basic contractile unit of skeletal and heart muscle cells, by using electron cryo-tomography. Electron cryo-tomography capabilit...
New machine learning tool diagnoses electron beams in an efficient, non-invasive way
Phys.org - 24 Mar 2021 23:41
Beams of accelerated electrons power electron microscopes, X-ray lasers, medical accelerators and other devices. To optimize the performance of these applications, operators must be able to analyze the quality of the bea...
False Memories Can Be Reversed
Neuroscience News - 24 Mar 2021 23:06
Researchers have developed new techniques that can correct false memory recollections without damaging true autobiographical memories.
Repurposed heart and flu drugs may help body fight sepsis
Science Daily - 24 Mar 2021 22:28
Researchers discovered that patient survival from sepsis is associated with higher platelet counts, and identified two currently available drugs that protect these blood cells and improve survival in mice with sepsis.
Bronze Age miners had cooked meals delivered to their workplace
New Scientist - 24 Mar 2021 22:00
People working on mining sites in the Eastern Alps during the Bronze Age had cooked, bread-based meals delivered to them during the day
Tiny swimming robots reach their target faster thanks to AI nudges
New Scientist - 24 Mar 2021 22:00
Swimming robots the size of bacteria can be knocked off course by particles in the fluid they are moving through, but an AI algorithm learns from feedback to get them to their target quickly
Does local honey really work as a hay fever cure?
New Scientist - 24 Mar 2021 22:00
Eating local honey is often recommended as a treatment for hay fever. Does it have any effect? James Wong investigates
This cloud of bats in Thailand could help us probe covid-19's origins
New Scientist - 24 Mar 2021 22:00
Photographer Adam Dean's striking shot of bats emerging from a Thai cave highlights research into the key question of whether covid-19 originates in bats
The rise of 'experiential units' that are impossible to understand
New Scientist - 24 Mar 2021 22:00
An elephant dangling by a rope the diameter of a table tennis ball, plus conference clumping and crab computing, in Feedback's weird weekly round-up
The World Before Us review: A gripping account of Earth's other humans
New Scientist - 24 Mar 2021 22:00
The Neanderthals, Denisovans and many others once shared Earth with us. What happened - and where are they now? Archaeologist Tom Higham has written a great insider account
The Hunt for Planet B review: Tracking the James Webb Space Telescope
New Scientist - 24 Mar 2021 22:00
With NASA's James Webb Space Telescope finally in sight, a new documentary charts its history and talks to leading scientists with a passion for the exoplanets and other worlds it may find
In Ghana, covid-19 feels like just another familiar health threat
New Scientist - 24 Mar 2021 22:00
Understanding how covid-19 has been perceived in West African nations like Ghana is crucial to tackling it, says Ama de-Graft Aikins
Green leafy vegetables essential for muscle strength
Science Daily - 24 Mar 2021 21:23
Eating just one cup of leafy green vegetables every day could boost muscle function, according to new research. The study found that people who consumed a nitrate-rich diet, predominantly from vegetables, had significant...
Millions of dead jellyfish are washing up around the world. 'The blob' could be to blame.
Live Science - 24 Mar 2021 20:38
Every few years, millions of by-the-wind sailor jellyfish wash up on beaches and die. What is causing so many of them to become stranded? The blob could be to blame.
Covid-19 news: EU proposes stricter controls on vaccine exports
New Scientist - 24 Mar 2021 20:35
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