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Science News

Location American Science News for 15 July 2026
NASA's James Webb Space Telescope has revealed new details about the blistering lava planet 55 Cancri e, where temperatures are high enough to melt rock. The data indicate the planet likely has a hydrogen-rich atmosp...
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An existing constipation drug may have an unexpected new use: helping clear the "brain fog" that often lingers after depression. In a small clinical trial, people with a history of depression who took the medicat...
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Fabrics are made by repeatedly intertwining yarns into characteristic patterns. Many of their properties, such as stretchiness, arise not only from the material itself but also from how the yarns are arranged and entangl...
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Loneliness Directly Causes Poor Mental Health

Neuroscience News - 15 Jul 2026 20:03
Loneliness Directly Causes Poor Mental Health By integrating observational analysis with sibling comparisons and Mendelian randomization, the cross-continental study isolates loneliness as an independent driver of systemic health decline and multi-condition physical...
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Aligning Brain Waves and Machine Learning

Neuroscience News - 15 Jul 2026 19:09
Aligning Brain Waves and Machine Learning By explicitly linking reinforcement-driven human neuroplasticity with gradient-based decoder optimization, the framework unifies biological trial-and-error learning with mathematical machine learning loops.
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Blood Test Accurately Predicts Five-Year Alzheimers Risk

Neuroscience News - 15 Jul 2026 18:42
Blood Test Accurately Predicts Five-Year Alzheimers Risk The analysis reveals that asymptomatic individuals presenting with very high baseline p-tau217 concentrations face an absolute 38% risk of developing cognitive impairment within 5 years, escalating to 78% within 10 years...
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Most Neurons Are Multi-Tasking Generalists

Neuroscience News - 15 Jul 2026 18:20
Most Neurons Are Multi-Tasking Generalists A new study utilizes International Brain Laboratory data across 43 mouse cortical regions to prove that multi-purpose generalist neurons constitute the overwhelming rule of mammalian brain architecture.
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Centered Daydreaming Reduces Core Limitations of AI Memory

Neuroscience News - 15 Jul 2026 18:03
Centered Daydreaming Reduces Core Limitations of AI Memory Centered Daydreaming alters the network's processing to analyze local variations relative to a running baseline average rather than absolute pixel inputs.
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Orange-lipped monkey that roars and snorts deep in Congo rainforest is new species to science A striking new monkey species, Colobus congoensis, was discovered deep in the Congo rainforest and has been scientifically described for the first time.
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Best treatment for multiple sclerosis may be antivirals Low levels of replicating Epstein-Barr viruses might be the main driver of the autoimmune condition multiple sclerosis. This may mean that targeting them would be as effective as suppressing the immune system, with fewer...
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Robot dog can climb stairs, navigate a forest and bound over logs thanks to new, rapid AI training technique Researchers used reinforcement learning to train a quadrupedal robot to adapt to different environments using two different pre-learned gaits.
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'Smaller than the tiniest scale in nature': Physicists made a black hole out of light and used it to test Stephen Hawking's elusive radiation theory Scientists made a breakthrough discovery about the physics of Hawking radiation by making a miniature black hole out of light in the laboratory.
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Imagine shining a flashlight across a dark room. You can predict exactly what the light will do: travel in a straight line from one point to another. That seems obvious because, in the world we see around us, light appea...
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It is vital we understand heat and humiditys differing effects on us The impact of high humidity on top of high temperatures is often underappreciated, but most of us aren't prepared for such extreme conditions, which will become more common with global warming
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This weeks new questions

New Scientist - 15 Jul 2026 17:00
Why dont dogs look up when a low-flying plane or helicopter passes overhead? Ive never seen one do this. And what changes will occur on Earth as the moon moves further away from us?
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Tom Gauld on immersive bat research

New Scientist - 15 Jul 2026 17:00
Tom Gauld on immersive bat research Tom Gauld's weekly cartoon
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TwistedDoodles on science podcast demographics

New Scientist - 15 Jul 2026 17:00
TwistedDoodles on science podcast demographics This week's cartoon from Twisteddoodles
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We tested Canons $10,000 wildlife zoom - can it replace a prime lens? We spent a week with the Canon RF 100-300mm f/2.8L IS USM lens to find out if its really worth the eye-watering price tag.
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Occasionally, the sun unleashes powerful flares and coronal mass ejections, which hurl plasma and energetic particles into space. On the infant Earth, this solar activity drove cascades of atmospheric chemical reactions ...
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A new study reveals that two widely studied ultrathin superconducting materials are more sophisticated than they appear. Although they seem to behave like simple superconductors with a single energy gap, they actually co...
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Quantum materials could transform technologies ranging from powerful computers and ultrasecure communications to advanced energy systems. But there has always been one major obstacle.
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Researchers have discovered that a microscopic skeleton inside neurons does much more than hold cells together. It acts as a gatekeeper that controls what brain cells absorb and when they absorb it. When this protective ...
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