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nature
Potent psychedelic drug banishes PTSD, small study finds
Military veterans with cognitive and psychological problems saw drastic improvements after a dose of ibogaine. Max Kozlov Psychedelic drugs such as...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
A Dyson Swarm Made of Solar Panels Would Make Earth Uninhabitable
As civilisations become more and more advanced, their power needs also increase. It’s likely that an advanced civilisation might need so much power...
universetoday.com - 30+ days ago
nature
AI & robotics briefing: GPT-4 can hack websites without human help
OpenAI’s model can be tuned to autonomously hack websites with a 73% success rate. Plus, an algorithm that reads mice’s mental sat-nav and what...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
The world’s largest proteins? These mega-molecules turn bacteria into predators
A candidate for the largest known protein might help killer aquatic bacteria to devour other microbes — but it’s not easy to study the behemoths, or...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Daily briefing: Deepest-ever samples from Earth’s mantle
From the very big to the very small — marvel at the 1,268-metre long sample of rock extracted from below the ocean’s crust, and the unexpected...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Record-breaking neutrino detected by huge underwater telescope
Particle is estimated to have 30 time s higher energy than any previously detected — plus, proposed cuts to NIH grants are put on hold by US...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Fragment of a human face aged over one million years discovered
The discovery of a human facial fragment aged over one million years represents the oldest known face in western Europe and confirms the region was...
sciencedaily.com - 30+ days ago
nature
This astronomy centre just achieved gender parity. Here’s how it happened
Education, female leadership and gender-balanced hiring policies were key. Gemma Conroy An Australian astronomy research centre has achieved gender...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Jaw-dropping views of the Milky Way and more — May’s best science images
Bright skies. The Milky Way Photographer of the Year competition celebrates the best images of the Milky Way taken around the world — and this year’s...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Daily briefing: A ‘data apocalypse’ at US public-health agencies
The month’s most stunning science images. Plus, a ‘data apocalypse’ as US public-health agencies move to comply with wide-ranging executive...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
This Giant Octopus Was Photographed on the Coast of Indonesia?
Image shows eerily large octopus purportedly washed ashore and surrounded by shocked locals. On June 4, 2024, a purported photograph of a giant...
snopes.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Science fact of the day: Blue cranes communicate through dance
Blue Cranes often use dance and movement to communicate with one another during mating season. Like many cranes, Blue Crane pairs will leap, bow, and...
classiccitynews.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Monkeypox virus keeps getting better at spreading among humans
Analysis of a clade Ia strain of the virus circulating in Central Africa shows genetic mutations indicative of sustained human-to-human spread. Max...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Mystery ‘skyquakes’ are ripping through the world. And nobody knows why
Skyquakes are very real. What causes them, however, is shrouded in mystery. If you’ve ever heard a loud, distant booming noise with no obvious...
sciencefocus.com - 30+ days ago
nature
How our brains decode speech: special neurons process certain sounds
Wire- thin probes inserted into the brains of living people show the parts played by individual neurons. SLS invites applications for multiple...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Largest Beetle Ever Discovered
Have you ever heard of the Goliath Beetle – the largest species of beetle in the world? This fascinating insect is widely regarded as an incredible...
animalsaroundtheglobe.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Walking Shouldn’t Be So Dangerous in the U.S.
I like to walk. In my big southern city, it’s a good way to get some exercise when the weather is nice or to run a nearby errand without having to...
scientificamerican.com - 30+ days ago
nature
NASA’s Psyche mission is on its way to this huge metal asteroid
The space rock — possibly the exposed core of a planet that didn’t finish forming — could reveal details about the Solar System’s origins. Alexandra...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Mystery oxygen source discovered on the sea floor — bewildering scientists
A chemical reaction could be producing oxygen by splitting water molecules, but its source of energy remains unknown. Davide Castelvecchi Something is...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Daily briefing: Food is medicine
Evidence is growing that targeted dietary interventions can treat, delay and even prevent some illnesses. Plus, an AI model helps track the spread of...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
How anti-obesity drugs cause nausea: finding offers hope for better drugs
The neurons that produce a sick feeling and food aversion are distinct from those that induce a feeling of fullness. Mariana Lenharo Mariana Lenharo is...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Gender-affirming therapy reshapes the immune systems of trans men
Testosterone treatment boosts levels of an inflammatory protein to those typically seen in cis men, study finds. Saima Sidik When trans men receive...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
How big is science’s fake-paper problem?
An unpublished analysis suggests that there are hundreds of thousands of bogus ‘paper-mill’ articles lurking in the literature. Richard Van Noorden The...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
‘In case I die, I need to publish this paper’: scientist who left the lab to fight in Ukraine
Neuroscientist Sergiy Sylantyev tells Nature that science and war cannot be separated. Layal Liverpool Layal Liverpool is a freelance science...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Vaccines reduce the risk of long COVID in children
A study shows that US children who received mRNA COVID-19 vaccines have some protection against developing long-lasting symptoms of the coronavirus...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Daily briefing: Genetically modified pig-organ transplant trial gets green light
The first pig-organ transplant trial in humans has been approved. Plus, the internet doesn't affect our memories, but AI might. Pig organ trial given...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
How to find meaning in your science career: six expert tips
Philosophers, social scientists and a Nobel-prizewinning economist on how researchers can get satisfaction from their work — and make a difference to...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Scientists relieved by far-right defeat in French election — but they still face uncertainty
With no party winning an outright majority, the vote’s implications for research are unclear. JUNIOR GROUP LEADER Professor position The International...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
What the OpenAI drama means for AI progress — and safety
A debacle at the company that built ChatGPT highlights concern that commercial forces are acting against the responsible development of...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Dana-Farber retractions: meet the blogger who spotted problems in dozens of cancer papers
Nature talks to Sholto David about his process for flagging image manipulation and his tips for scientists under scrutiny. Max Kozlov The prestigious...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
AI hallucinations can’t be stopped — but these techniques can limit their damage
Developers have tricks to stop artificial intelligence from making things up, but large language models are still struggling to tell the truth, the...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Why babies in South Korea are suing the government
The first case in East Asia to challenge government climate policies will boost awareness of global warming and encourage further lawsuits in the...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Move over, CRISPR: RNA-editing therapies pick up steam
Two RNA-editing therapies for genetic diseases have in the past few months gained approval for clinical trials, raising hopes for safer...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
How a ‘billion oysters’ could protect the New York coastline from climate change
Advocates argue that restoring the oyster reefs that once armoured shorelines could help to buffer against extreme storms. Alix Soliman New York...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
How fast your brain ages is affected by these 64 genes
Scientists also identified anti-ageing drugs and experimental compounds that could target the genes to reverse decline. Researchers have identified 64...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Capturing Elegance in Flight: Stunning Bird Photography by Canadian Photographer Salman Ahmad
Birds have long been a symbol of freedom, grace, and the unspoken beauty of nature, and Canadian photographer Salman Ahmad has dedicated his craft to...
121clicks.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Earth’s hottest month: these charts show what happened in July and what comes next
The planet has warmed 1.2 ºC on average, but that’s enough to produce big extremes. Jeff Tollefson From wilting saguaros in Arizona and hot-tub-like...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
New ecoregion proposed for Southern Africa’s threatened ‘sky islands’
See All Key Ideas There is an “inland archipelago” of mountains stretching across southern Malawi and northern Mozambique — a chain of hard granite...
mongabay.com - 30+ days ago
nature
‘Mind-blowing’ IBM chip speeds up AI
IBM’s NorthPole processor sidesteps need to access external memory, boosting computing power and saving energy. Davide Castelvecchi A brain-inspired...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
CRISPR builds a big tomato that’s actually sweet
Deleting just two genes that control sugar production makes a more succulent fruit. Max Kozlov Rotten tomatoes no more: growing sweeter tomatoes is...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Daily briefing: COVID protections eliminated a strain of flu
Wearing a mask, social distancing and better ventilation during the COVID-19 outbreak means we can remove one lineage of influenza from our vaccines....
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
How the ‘groundbreaking’ Henrietta Lacks settlement could change research
Thermo Fisher Scientific and Lacks’s family reach a deal over the unethical use of her cells. Anil Oza Mariana Lenharo Earlier this week, the...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Daily briefing: COVID boosters are back
Some countries are rushing to roll out autumn COVID-19 vaccination campaigns. Plus, why Morocco’s earthquake was so deadly and how lab leaders in the...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
How animals react to death: From vigils to cannibalism
‘Grief is not just a human thing.’ There are scant inevitabilities in life. One of them (with very few exceptions) is death. Unless you’re a particular type of freshwater polyp or a weirdo jellyfish, birth is a guarantee of death. Humans have developed our own intricate coping strategies for...
popsci.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Landowners shut the gates in the 1960s. Now, few ever see this California gem.
Inside the mountain range closed to the public In the middle of the Sacramento Valley, where the earth transforms from flat, endless farmland to the craggy peaks of an ancient volcanic lake, my guide drives me past the creaking metal of a locked cattle gate. Then another. And another. Twenty minutes...
sfgate.com - 30+ days ago
nature / science
Hegseth Orders Elimination of Pentagon Climate Planning but Wants Extreme Weather Preparation
CLIMATEWIRE | A new memo from Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth doubles down on his campaign to eliminate the Pentagon's work on climate — calling for a...
scientificamerican.com - 30+ days ago
nature
The Nature Podcast festive spectacular 2023
Games, seasonal science songs, and Nature’s 10. In this episode: 01:55 “Oh GPT” In the first of our festive songs, we pay homage to LLMs, the generative...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Daily briefing: How to stand out from the crowd when applying for a scientific job
Tips from career experts on how to land a scientific position even in a struggling economy. Plus, the science events to watch for in 2024 and cats...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Daily briefing: Meet the recipient of the first whole-eye transplant
The world’s first successful face transplant including a whole eye, the US and China inch towards renewing a science-cooperation pact and how ‘likes’...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
mRNA COVID vaccines saved lives and won a Nobel — what’s next for the technology?
Nature talks to experts about how messenger RNA is transforming medicine. Elie Dolgin Heidi Ledford In just three short years, mRNA vaccines have saved...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
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