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16 votes
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Thirty-nine volumes of the Swedish Academy Dictionary stand as Sweden's answer to the Oxford English Dictionary. And it's just been sent to the printers after 140 years.
18 votes -
Researchers develop new mechanism to create water-repellent surfaces
7 votes -
Mutations matter
5 votes -
The world inside you
11 votes -
Researchers have designs on better women’s hockey protective gear
11 votes -
Researchers use AI to read from 2000 year old Herculaneum scroll
12 votes -
Vikings and glass windows
7 votes -
Denmark's first Viking queen was likely more powerful than the king, research finds
14 votes -
Anti-COVID drug may have led to virus mutations: study
10 votes -
Study shows Germany's East-West divide in top positions
13 votes -
Your NFTs are actually — finally — totally worthless
46 votes -
Recent neuroscience research suggests that popular strategies to control dopamine are based on an overly narrow view of how it functions
17 votes -
38TB of data accidentally exposed by Microsoft AI researchers
14 votes -
US researchers employed by federal Housing and Urban Development agency propose study re comparative effectiveness of cash grants vs current system of vouchers for housing assistance
15 votes -
‘Our ability to forsee the future and review the past predisposes us to mental illness’
17 votes -
Obituary: Remembering Doug Lenat (1950–2023) and his quest to capture the world with logic
12 votes -
Active North Korean campaign targeting security researchers
9 votes -
Archeologists in Norway found an arrow that was likely trapped in ice for 4,000 years
11 votes -
Google removes fake Signal and Telegram apps hosted on Play
27 votes -
Ig Nobel Prize winner Higashiyama Atsuki and the “Between-Legs Effect” mystery
40 votes -
2,400-year-old baskets still filled with fruit found in submerged Egyptian city
26 votes -
Researchers engineer bacteria that can detect tumor DNA (in mice)
6 votes -
Charles Henry Turner’s insights into animal behavior were a century ahead of their time
4 votes -
Butterfly flight inspired researchers to explore new ways to create force and electricity
10 votes -
Medical researchers report that the workers who make quartz countertops are dying of lung disease at a young age
31 votes -
Researchers are trying to unravel the mystery of snow that falls but never shows up in the Colorado river
13 votes -
How far will salmon swim for a craft beer? In Oregon, researchers hope a surprising aroma will lure stray salmon back to their home hatcheries.
11 votes -
By selectively breeding forty generations of silver fox over the course of sixty years, researchers managed to make them as friendly as dogs
64 votes -
Researchers have decoded more than half of the characters in the so-called Kushan script by comparing them with inscriptions in a known ancient language called Bactrian
13 votes -
AI often mangles African languages. A network of thousands of coders and researchers is working to develop translation tools that understand their native languages
17 votes -
Researchers train and apply an LLM and an image generator to create bespoke South Park episodes
13 votes -
The coolest library on Earth: At the University of Copenhagen, researchers store ice cores that hold the keys to Earth’s climate past and future
15 votes -
I interviewed the researcher behind the Misinformation Susceptibility Test
https://youtu.be/vodNabH5qoM But some important context: Earlier this month I saw a post regarding a Misinformation Susceptibility Test and was curious how 20 binary questions could be an...
https://youtu.be/vodNabH5qoM
But some important context:Earlier this month I saw a post regarding a Misinformation Susceptibility Test and was curious how 20 binary questions could be an indicator of someones media biases.
I started digging into the related paper and while the methods and analysis was interesting, there was still a lot of questions. So I reached out to Dr Rakoen Maertens who headed the study and we agreed to a discussion on the assessment and his experiences in social psychology.
The video above is an unlisted, unedited cut of the interview and I'd love to get some feedback:
Firstly: I have offered the Dr a tildes invite and he may engage with any questions or discussion. Time was limited and there were a lot of topics that was only briefly touched on or overlooked. Here is the original paper and supplementary resources if you want to see some of the language model work and bigger 100 question tests.
Secondly: I am going to do a more through edit and posting this on a dedicated channel. Since cutting off reddit, twitter and tiktoc; I've sort of rediscovered a love learning and investigations. I'd like to know if people like this form of engagement and discussions. No fancy production, just simply engaging with the research and academics behind topical and interesting ideas.
I'm already reading into fandom psychology, UV reflective paint, children's TV and CO2 scrubbing technology.
72 votes -
Crows and magpies using anti-bird spikes to build nests, researchers find
50 votes -
Johnson & Johnson sues researchers who linked talc to cancer
38 votes -
Artificial Intelligence Sweden is leading an initiative to build a large language model not only for Swedish, but for all the major languages in the Nordic region
6 votes -
As it joins NATO, Finland recorded its highest year-on-year increase in military spending since 1962 – global military spending rose by 3.7% in real terms
6 votes -
Bioluminescence helps researchers develop cancer drugs for brain
3 votes -
This guy shares cool maps of the world every day on Facebook
5 votes -
Belgium launches nationwide safe harbor for ethical hackers
10 votes -
Fifth person confirmed to be cured of HIV
13 votes -
The ‘breakthrough’ obesity drugs that have stunned researchers
17 votes -
Over-reliance on English hinders cognitive science
4 votes -
Stanford Medicine researchers measure thousands of molecules from a single drop of blood
12 votes -
World's oldest European hedgehog discovered in Denmark – posthumous discovery gives conservationists hope for the mammals' future preservation
4 votes -
In 1952, a landslide caused a tsunami that killed a Greenlandic man – some researchers think he might have been an early victim of anthropogenic warming
2 votes -
Researchers successfully prevent peanut allergic reactions in mice, blocking onset in its tracks
5 votes -
A Dutch researcher named Frank Hoogerbeets had predicted the Turkey earthquake two days before it had happened
Dude actually made this tweet on 3rd February, two days before the dreaded quake hit Turkey: Sooner or later there will be a ~M 7.5 #earthquake in this region (South-Central Turkey, Jordan, Syria,...
Dude actually made this tweet on 3rd February, two days before the dreaded quake hit Turkey:
Sooner or later there will be a ~M 7.5 #earthquake in this region (South-Central Turkey, Jordan, Syria, Lebanon). #deprem
What's interesting about this researcher is that he doesn't study earthquakes through the traditional or established way of Seismology. Instead, his institute, SSGEOS specializes in "monitoring geometry between celestial bodies related to seismic activity". It's incredible how little we know about the world we live in and how much more there is to know yet.
5 votes -
Researchers look a dinosaur in its remarkably preserved face
12 votes