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40 votes
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Cracking the black box of deep sequence-based protein-protein interaction prediction
9 votes -
Immediate effects of mobile phone app for depressed mood in young adults with subthreshold depression: A pilot randomized controlled trial
14 votes -
Mundane participation: Power imbalances in youth media use
5 votes -
Artificial intelligence versus human-controlled doctor in virtual reality simulation for sepsis team training: Randomized controlled study
10 votes -
Lights could be the future of the internet and data transmission
9 votes -
The reshuffling of neurons during fruit fly metamorphosis suggests that larval memories don’t persist in adults
27 votes -
Egg 'signatures' allow drongos to identify cuckoo 'forgeries' almost every time, study finds
10 votes -
A seed survival story: How trees keep 'friends' close and 'enemies' guessing
12 votes -
New study finds Covid can infect the liver
13 votes -
How quantum physicists explained Earth’s oscillating weather patterns
6 votes -
Downtown Recovery Rankings
17 votes -
Parrots taught to video call each other become less lonely, finds research
10 votes -
Citizen science observation of a gamma-ray glow associated with the initiation of a lightning flash
5 votes -
How coral reefs can survive climate change
8 votes -
Bees just wanna have fungi - a review of bee associations with nonpathogenic fungi
12 votes -
500-million-year-old fossil of invertebrate sea creature illuminates gap in fossil record
A rare, half-billion-year-old fossil gives us a clue to how a bizarre marine invertebrate can possibly be related to humans. In a study published on July 6 in the journal Nature Communications,...
A rare, half-billion-year-old fossil gives us a clue to how a bizarre marine invertebrate can possibly be related to humans. In a study published on July 6 in the journal Nature Communications, Harvard University researchers identified a prehistoric specimen in a collection at the Natural History Museum of Utah as a tunicate, or sea squirt. The preserved invertebrate, which was originally discovered in the rugged, desert-like landscape of the House Range in western Utah, can be used to understand evolution mysteries that go way back to the Cambrian explosion.
“There are essentially no tunicate fossils in the entire fossil record. They’ve got a 520- to 540-million year-long gap,” says Karma Nanglu, an invertebrate paleontologist at Harvard. “This fossil isthe first soft-tissue tunicate in, we would argue, the entire fossil record.”
14 votes -
Injection of kidney protein improves working memory in monkeys
9 votes -
Lonely people see the world differently, according to their brains
30 votes -
The network of collaboration among rappers and its community structure
9 votes -
Trace amounts of antidepressants cause behavioral changes in crayfish, potentially making them more vulnerable to predators
14 votes -
The physics of dancing peanuts in beer
8 votes -
For a billion years of Earth's history our days were only nineteen hours long, finds new study
26 votes -
Alzheimer’s drug gets FDA panel’s backing, setting the stage for broader US use
13 votes -
Nanoplastic ingestion causes neurological deficits
8 votes -
Cognitive endurance as human capital
6 votes -
The myth of the alpha wolf
6 votes -
Over-reliance on English hinders cognitive science
4 votes -
Researchers successfully prevent peanut allergic reactions in mice, blocking onset in its tracks
5 votes -
Scientists use CRISPR to insert an alligator gene into a catfish. Disease kills off 40% of farmed catfish. This gene protects them.
8 votes -
‘Self-healing’ Roman concrete could aid modern construction, study suggests
13 votes -
Listening to podcasts may help satisfy our psychological need for social connection, study finds
12 votes -
Scientists discovered the oldest known DNA and used it to reveal what life was like two million years ago in the northern tip of Greenland
4 votes -
How do fireflies flash in sync? Studies suggest a new answer.
3 votes -
New evidence indicates that an effort to stamp out disease-carrying insects is working. The key? Mosquitoes genetically engineered to kill off their own kind.
5 votes -
US physics body concedes mistakes in study of missile defense
8 votes -
‘Zombie papers’ just won’t die. Retracted papers by notorious fraudster still cited years later.
9 votes -
Dual use of artificial-intelligence-powered drug discovery
5 votes -
Predictive pattern classification can distinguish gender identity subtypes from behavior and brain imaging
14 votes -
Strong new evidence suggests a virus triggers multiple sclerosis
12 votes -
When times are good, the gender gap grows
9 votes -
Could search engines be fostering some Dunning-Kruger?
9 votes -
Approximate data deletion from machine learning models
3 votes -
Butterflies released in Finland contained parasitic wasps, with more wasps inside – introduction of Glanville fritillary leads to emergence of three new species on island of Sottunga
8 votes -
Online trolls actually just assholes all the time, study finds
28 votes -
Does X cause Y? An in-depth evidence review.
5 votes -
Meth addiction in fish poses threat to ecosystem balance, study says
7 votes -
Neurotype-matching, but not being autistic, influences self and observer ratings of interpersonal rapport
12 votes -
Robotic ‘Third Thumb’ use can alter brain representation of the hand
5 votes -
To the brain, a tool is just a tool, not a hand extension
5 votes