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Science News

Location American Science News for 5 June 2026
Toxic Clumps in Huntingtons Disease May Protect the Brain Too The findings could lead to new treatments for multiple neurodegenerative diseases. The post Toxic Clumps in Huntingtons Disease May Protect the Brain Too appeared first on SingularityHub.
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A team in the US has reported promising results after using an improved form of CRISPR to gene-edit human embryos, but a major issue remains unsolved
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World's largest scorpion had 6-inch pincers, and prowled UK land and waters 415 million years ago Enigmatic 415 million-year-old fossils belong to a giant scorpion that may have reached lengths of around 3 feet (1 meter), a remarkable body size because most life on land at that time was small.
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Early Life Diet Linked to Adolescent Intelligence

Neuroscience News - 5 Jun 2026 20:40
Early Life Diet Linked to Adolescent Intelligence Researchers discovered discovered that sub-optimal nutrition during the first years of life correlates with lower intelligence scores during adolescence, even after accounting for external confounding influences.
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Scientists warn that the Trump Administration's push to dismantle a vital network of ocean sensing instruments will stymie crucial weather and climate monitoring in the Pacific and Atlantic
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Inside cells, certain functions are carried out by locally adjusting molecular composition. This condensation of material results in the formation of dense droplets that can dynamically rearrange. Because of this, intera...
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Coming El Niño will be the strongest ever recorded, new forecast predicts A June update by the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts suggests that the coming weather event will be the strongest ever measured.
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Does a Healthy Lifestyle Lower Dementia Risk for Those with APOE4? A new study demonstrates that the protective benefits of lifestyle habits depend heavily on a person's exact genetic profile.
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The modern world depends on open-source software maintained by volunteers, but the added demands of checking and fixing AI-written submissions are causing some to burn out and quit
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Waves of light and sound interact to drive electronic and structural changes in a perovskite crystal. At the atomic scale, nothing is ever truly still. Materials that appear perfectly rigid and motionless to the naked ey...
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NASA astronauts briefly shelter in 'safe haven' procedure following worsening leaks on International Space Station A brief leak scare on the International Space Station complicates NASA and Congress' plans to extend the station's lifespan to at least 2032.
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Mice that contain cells with an added rat chromosome have been created by scientists. The next step is to try this with frozen elephant tissue - and if that works, the team will try it with frozen mammoths
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Flu drugs might fight cognitive decline seen in HIV, early study hints A very early study suggests flu antivirals might help reverse certain signs of accelerated aging in people with HIV. But more research is needed to confirm these effects.
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Some 'extinct' volcanoes may just be going through a growth spurt, before they 'wake up in this catastrophic stage,' emerging research suggests A volcano that erupted after being asleep for more than 100,000 years is leading more volcanologists to say we must redefine volcano activity to ensure eruptions don't surprise us.
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University of Tennessee, Knoxville physicists and their colleagues have made critical measurements of the lifetime and decay energy of tellurium-104 (Te-104), an important step in answering a century-old question and und...
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Scientists have successfully tested an AI-designed universal coronavirus vaccine in humans for the first time, finding it to be safe and well tolerated. The vaccine generated immune responses against multiple coronavirus...
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Scientists have identified genetic variants that may make some people less responsive to GLP-1 drugs used to treat Type 2 diabetes. Roughly 10% of the population carries these variants, which appear to cause a mysterious...
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Scientists race to collect the last seeds from a critically endangered tree before it goes extinct Seeds from the last surviving wild Dendroseris neriifolia tree are now stored in Kew Gardens' Millennium Seed Bank as researchers work to find ways to reintroduce the species into the wild.
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A seemingly simple set of rules kicks off a kind of mathematical magic trick, which has kept great minds busy since the 1930s. Columnist Jacob Aron explores the origins of the Collatz conjecture, why it is so addictive t...
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'The best solution is to murder him in his sleep': AI can learn violent tendencies from each other despite zero references to violence in training data Scientists found that AI models can inherit a taste for murder (or owls) from other models' training data.
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Octopuses use mirrors to find food they cannot see

Science Daily - 5 Jun 2026 11:43
Octopuses may be even smarter than we thought. Researchers at Dartmouth found that octopuses can learn to use mirrors to locate food hidden behind them-a skill previously seen only in vertebrates like mammals and birds. ...
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Scientists have proposed a new method for finding tightly bound supermassive black hole pairs by searching for stars that flash repeatedly as their light is magnified by the black holes gravity. The timing and brightness...
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