Science News
Study finds wild release can be deadly for rescued slow lorises
Science Daily - 3 Mar 2026 23:19
Returning rescued slow lorises to the wild may sound like a conservation success, but a new study shows it can turn deadly. Researchers tracked nine released animals and found that only two survived, with most killed in ...
Mysterious 'little red dots' discovered by James Webb telescope may be the first stars in the universe on the verge of collapse
Live Science - 3 Mar 2026 22:04
A new study suggests that "little red dots" spied by the James Webb Space Telescope could be the universe's short-lived first generation of gigantic stars, challenging an existing theory.
Stone Age woman was buried like a man, revealing flexible gender roles 7,000 years ago in Hungary
Live Science - 3 Mar 2026 21:58
A study of 125 skeletons from two Neolithic cemeteries in Hungary has revealed that men and women had clear gender roles - but sometimes those roles were fluid.
Chronic Back Pain Makes the World Sound Harsher
Neuroscience News - 3 Mar 2026 21:34
New research shows that chronic back pain rewires the brain to amplify sound, but specialized therapy can reset the brain's "volume knob."
Why the Brain and Breath Part Ways During Heavy Slumber
Neuroscience News - 3 Mar 2026 20:59
New research reveals that during the deepest non-REM sleep, the brains neural rhythms become independent of breathing, a discovery that could unlock new treatments for Parkinsons.
Brains On-Switch for Imagination Found
Neuroscience News - 3 Mar 2026 20:41
Imagination's "Off" switch. Scientists identify a specific brain node that, when damaged or disconnected, causes the "mind's eye" to go dark.
'Collective hum' of black holes could mend our broken understanding of the universe, physicists say
Live Science - 3 Mar 2026 20:00
Ripples in the fabric of space-time called gravitational waves may be the key to solving the Hubble tension - one of the biggest nagging problems in physics.
Neutrinos could explain why matter survived the Big Bang
Science Daily - 3 Mar 2026 19:59
An international team combining two major neutrino experiments has uncovered stronger evidence that neutrinos and antimatter dont behave as perfect mirror images. That subtle difference may hold the key to why the univer...
Gold coin discovered by a metal detectorist in the UK may have been dropped by a Viking invader from the Great Heathen Army
Live Science - 3 Mar 2026 19:49
A gold coin featuring the son of Charlemagne may have been a keepsake from a Viking invader who fought in the Great Heathen Army.
Why Our Bodies Synchronize During Social Interaction
Neuroscience News - 3 Mar 2026 18:19
A new review reveals that our hearts and bodies literally "align" during social interactions, providing a biological foundation for empathy, teamwork, and trust.
Phantom codes could help quantum computers avoid errors
New Scientist - 3 Mar 2026 18:00
A method for making quantum computers less error-prone could let them run complex programs such as simulations of materials more efficiently, thus making them more useful
What snow monkeys steamy baths are really doing to their bodies
Science Daily - 3 Mar 2026 17:55
Japanese snow monkeys dont just soak in hot springs to escape the winter chill - their steamy spa sessions may also be reshaping their invisible world. Researchers in Japan found that macaques who regularly bathe show su...
Autism and Parkinsons Share a Hidden Neural Defect
Neuroscience News - 3 Mar 2026 17:49
New research reveals that young adults with autism show brain scan abnormalities typically found in Parkinsons patients, offering a new path for early prevention.
What an AI Birdsong Decoder Tells Us About the Human Brain
Neuroscience News - 3 Mar 2026 17:15
New "TweetyBERT" AI uses large language model architecture to automatically map the complex songs of canaries, offering a high-speed tool for speech research.
Rare family has had many more sons than daughters for generations
New Scientist - 3 Mar 2026 17:13
Analysing the births of a Utah family over seven generations has revealed that their disproportionate number of boys could be caused by a selfish Y chromosome
Selfish Y chromosome may explain why some families mostly have sons
New Scientist - 3 Mar 2026 17:13
A family in Utah with a disproportionate number of boys has been traced back over hundreds of years, revealing that its lack of female members is probably due to a selfish Y chromosome
The real reasons birth rates are declining worldwide
New Scientist - 3 Mar 2026 16:00
From the cost of childcare to the housing crisis, theres no shortage ofexplanationsfor the dramatic global fall in the number of babies being born. These analyses, though, are all missing something, says cognitive and ev...
Your microbiome may determine your risk of a severe allergic reaction
New Scientist - 3 Mar 2026 16:00
The microbes that live in our mouth and gut may influence whether an allergic reaction to peanuts is mild or life-threatening, and could be harnessed to ward off a severe attack
Scientists build a periodic table for AI
Science Daily - 3 Mar 2026 14:57
Choosing the right method for multimodal AI-systems that combine text, images, and more-has long been trial and error. Emory physicists created a unifying mathematical framework that shows many AI techniques rely on the ...
Every ant is a queen in this parasitic species - and they reproduce by cloning themselves and hijacking other ant colonies
Live Science - 3 Mar 2026 14:56
A rare Japanese ant is the only species known to lack female workers and males; all of its young develop into parasitic queens that try to take over other colonies.
This simple blood protein could stop a deadly black fungus
Science Daily - 3 Mar 2026 14:56
Scientists have uncovered a surprising new hero in the fight against one of the worlds deadliest fungal infections: albumin, the most abundant protein in human blood. In a major international study, researchers found tha...
Vanuatu's 'barefoot volcanologist' stands at ash- and sulfur-spewing Mount Yasur in award-winning photograph
Live Science - 3 Mar 2026 14:30
Elle Leontiev's image of Philip, a self-taught volcanologist who has lived on Mount Yasur his whole life, has won the Portraiture category of the Open competition of the Sony World Photography Awards 2026.