Science News
New living plastic self-destructs in just 6 days without leaving microplastics
Science Daily - 16 Jul 2026 23:09
Researchers have created self-destructing living plastic that uses engineered bacteria to completely break itself down when activated. The material degrades in just six days without creating microplastics, offering a pot...
Is AI Making Us Dumber?
Singularity Hub - 16 Jul 2026 23:03
Research suggests offloading mental work to AI is like debt: an immediate payoff with long-term consequences. But collaborating with the technology may boost our work without eroding skills. The post Is AI Making Us Dumb...
This sugar-coated therapy boosted survival against deadly brain cancer by 50% in mice
Science Daily - 16 Jul 2026 21:51
A new experimental treatment may have found a way to outsmart glioblastomas toughest defense: the blood-brain barrier. Researchers used sugar-coated nanoparticles to ferry genetic instructions that restore a key tumor-su...
Macrophage Receptor Blockade Reverses Multi-Organ Aging
Neuroscience News - 16 Jul 2026 20:11
Age-related multi-organ decline is driven by an EP2-receptor-mediated failure of tissue-resident macrophages to clear senescent neutrophils.
Ancient chariot emerges among remains of mysterious society that burned down its own buildings and then disappeared
Live Science - 16 Jul 2026 20:04
An ancient bronze chariot recently discovered in Spain was used by a culture that mysteriously disappeared from the archaeological record.
Widespread M1 Receptor Deficits in Schizophrenia Found
Neuroscience News - 16 Jul 2026 19:44
A new study utilizes a novel PET radiotracer to provide the first in vivo evidence of widespread muscarinic acetylcholine M1 receptor deficits in living schizophrenia patients.
Brain Can Process Two Conversations at Once
Neuroscience News - 16 Jul 2026 19:30
A new study demonstrates that the human brain can simultaneously process two competing conversations during attentional shifts.
Nobel Prize-winning physicist and team use Claude AI to solve decades-old math puzzle
Live Science - 16 Jul 2026 19:16
A decade after uncovering a mysterious mathematical relationship in the physics of "jamming," Nobel laureate Giorgio Parisi and collaborator Francesco Zamponi have finally cracked the case - not with a radical ne...
Brain Activity Noise Linked to Autism Communication
Neuroscience News - 16 Jul 2026 19:11
A new study demonstrates that altered aperiodic background signals on high-density 128-channel EEGs correlate with functional communication challenges in autistic youth.
Thousands of liberated Africans died on a remote island after the British Navy freed them. We now know where they came from.
Live Science - 16 Jul 2026 18:00
Thousands of enslaved Africans were liberated from slave ships and died on the island of St. Helena around 200 years ago. A new chemical analysis has revealed their tragic stories.
Single Neural Population Detects Both Warm and Cool Sensations
Neuroscience News - 16 Jul 2026 17:51
A new study demonstrates that non-painful thermal perception is governed by a single population of bidirectional neurons rather than separate warm and cool receptors.
Single fission experiment maps excess gamma rays from more than a dozen unstable nuclei
Phys.org - 16 Jul 2026 17:40
In a single experiment, physicists have measured the "excess" emission of high-energy gamma rays from more than a dozen heavy, unstable atomic nuclei. Mapping the gamma-ray emissions of so many isotopes produced ...
Brain Sugars Essential for Maintaining Nerve Signal Speed
Neuroscience News - 16 Jul 2026 17:39
Branched O-mannose glycans synthesized by the brain-specific enzyme MGAT5B are essential for maintaining the narrow architecture of the nodes of Ranvier.
Oops! Ancient Bronze Age shaman long assumed to be a man was actually a woman, DNA reveals
Live Science - 16 Jul 2026 17:04
A DNA analysis of a 4,000-year-old skeleton buried with an elaborate metalworking tool kit near Stonehenge has revealed that the individual, long assumed to be a male shaman, was actually a woman.
Neurostimulation restores feeling in paralysed hand for months after
New Scientist - 16 Jul 2026 17:02
Keith Thomas, 48, has paralysis, but brain stimulation gave him some feeling and movement in his hands - and this was maintained even when the stimulation was turned off
Weve found a rocky, temperate planets atmosphere for the first time
New Scientist - 16 Jul 2026 17:00
Astronomers have only previously found atmospheres around exoplanets that are very large or incredibly hot - but now they have found one adorning a world that may well be right for life
'This was one of the most arduous expeditions I've ever done': Scientists confirm that 15-mile-wide pit found on Google Maps is ancient meteor crater
Live Science - 16 Jul 2026 16:54
Joël Lapointe was using Google Maps to plan a camping trail through Quebec's Côte-Nord region when he stumbled across a large indentation. Now, scientists have confirmed that the pit was indeed a meteor impact crat...
Next-generation Alzheimers drug reduces risk of serious brain bleeds
New Scientist - 16 Jul 2026 15:27
A new kind of antibody drug that more efficiently enters the brain could slow the progression of Alzheimer's disease with a much lower risk of dangerous side effects than existing therapies
Cold radioactive molecules prepped and readied for physics discoveries
Phys.org - 16 Jul 2026 14:00
For the first time, researchers have developed a way to create chilled molecules containing the radioactive element radium. The resulting laboratory concoctions, generated in part through steps similar to those used to m...
Roadmap paper shows how superconductors can decarbonize transport sector
Phys.org - 16 Jul 2026 12:30
Superconducting technologies have the potential to supercharge the decarbonization of transport, saving gigatonnes of emissions in the future, a landmark new paper suggests.
Scientists create stable 'boron graphene' and uncover quantum liquid crystal state
Phys.org - 16 Jul 2026 12:20
Graphene has long been regarded as one of the most promising materials for future electronics, but its relatively weak electron interactions have limited its potential for applications such as high-temperature supercondu...
Schrödingerlike charges in sixmolecule clusters point to new quantum components
Phys.org - 16 Jul 2026 11:40
Researchers from the University of Basel have published details of how electrons within a cluster of molecules interact with one another and can be controlled. Their findings pave the way for new approaches to developing...