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3 votes
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Why are clinical trials so complicated?
3 votes -
Why do so few people major in computer science?
15 votes -
Are we ready for quantum computers?
3 votes -
Labs are euthanizing thousands of mice in response to coronavirus pandemic
10 votes -
Chloroquine, past and present
3 votes -
New blood tests for antibodies could show true scale of coronavirus pandemic
8 votes -
Lessons from the fields of crisis informatics and the sociology of disaster for COVID 19
8 votes -
Mt. Þorbjörn, Reykjanes – Icelandic volcano swell signals potential eruption
4 votes -
Scientists just used a supercomputer to make a living organism from scratch
2 votes -
An examination of over 4700 clinical trials found that less than 45% of them reported their results on time, despite it being a legal requirement
7 votes -
2019 in review: The year in math and computer science
6 votes -
The next graphene? Shiny and magnetic, a new form of pure carbon dazzles with potential
11 votes -
Does transparency in moderation really matter? User behavior after content removal explanations on Reddit.
14 votes -
Google demonstrating quantum supremacy
11 votes -
Quantum supremacy: The gloves are off
7 votes -
Can brain science help us break bad habits?
6 votes -
Scott Aaronson's Quantum Supremacy FAQ
10 votes -
AI competitions don’t produce useful models
5 votes -
Sally Floyd, who helped things run smoothly online, dies at 69
7 votes -
A mathematician has resolved the Sensitivity Conjecture, a nearly thirty-year-old problem in computer science
24 votes -
Airborne concentrations and chemical considerations of radioactive ruthenium from an undeclared major nuclear release in 2017
13 votes -
Watch the Ridgecrest earthquake shatter the desert floor in stunning before-and-after images
12 votes -
The long-awaited upgrade to the US weather forecast model is here
7 votes -
Quantum computing is a marathon, not a sprint
5 votes -
Researchers strapped video cameras on sixteen cats and let them do their thing. Here’s what they found. (Q&A with Maren Huck about her recent study in Applied Animal Behaviour Science)
9 votes -
The hidden heroines of chaos
5 votes -
New batlike dinosaur was early experiment in flight
4 votes -
Bad evidence: Ten years after a landmark study blew the whistle on junk science, the fight over forensics rages on
7 votes -
Quantum computing for the very curious
6 votes -
A new approach to multiplication opens the door to better quantum computers
7 votes -
Pop science
5 votes -
Conspiracy theories can't be stopped
10 votes -
Inorganic chemistry: What exact color does ozone gas have?
11 votes -
Cracking the mystery of egg shape
5 votes -
At Yale, we conducted an experiment to turn conservatives into liberals. The results say a lot about our political divisions.
34 votes -
Why 536 was ‘the worst year to be alive’
14 votes -
Small molecule structures: A new world
7 votes -
How venoms are shaping medical advances
4 votes -
European science funders ban grantees from publishing in paywalled journals
16 votes -
The new science of seeing around corners
10 votes -
A study on the online "filter bubble" found that liberals and conservatives were actually recommended similar stories on Google News, representing a fairly homogeneous set of mainstream news sources
8 votes -
Delayed impact of fair machine learning
4 votes -
Computer science as a lost art
13 votes -
Chinese researchers achieve stunning quantum-entanglement record
2 votes -
Science under siege: Behind the scenes at Trump’s troubled environment agency
8 votes -
Any interest in the social sciences and humanities here?
Most spaces flying the flag of science are often unfortunately exclusive in their focus on STEM sciences. In order to combat such a monopoly and until such time as Tildes opens up groups for the...
Most spaces flying the flag of science are often unfortunately exclusive in their focus on STEM sciences. In order to combat such a monopoly and until such time as Tildes opens up groups for the social sciences and humanities, I'd like to open this place up to discussion around some of the disciplines which have always personally interested me more than, say, astronomy or biology. Is anyone else here interested in sociology, archaeology, anthropology, linguistics..? Has anyone pursued work in those fields? Any interesting perspectives to offer or news of recent breakthroughs in any of those areas? All discussion is welcome.
As for myself, I'm particularly interested in sociocultural anthropology and archaeology--in the latter case, specifically as relates to the Neolithic and Bronze Age Near East. I'll soon be pursuing a degree in anthropology with an archaeological orientation at the University of Buenos Aires and hope to be working in the field soon after the end of my studies. I'm also incidentally interested in sociology, philosophy, and literature studies, but don't have any plans at the moment to pursue academic study thereof. Any questions? Feel free to ask.
17 votes -
Newborn screening urged for fatal neurological disorder, spinal muscular atrophy (SMA)
6 votes -
Feeding the gods: Hundreds of skulls reveal massive scale of human sacrifice in Aztec capital
7 votes -
New technique could help scientists creat custom genes in twenty-four hours
11 votes