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127 articles from ScienceNOW
Is technology spying on you? New AI could prevent eavesdropping
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Big Brother is listening. Companies use “bossware” to listen to their employees when they’re near their computers. Multiple “spyware” apps can record phone calls. And home devices such as Amazon’s Echo can record everyday conversations. A new technology,...
SATURDAY 28. MAY 2022
“An awful lot of untouched questions.” The state of U.S. gun violence research
Funding for needed studies remains scarce, says physician Rebecca Cunningham
FRIDAY 27. MAY 2022
Accuser loses defamation suit in Peruvian sexual harassment case
Human rights groups and scientists condemn decision as a blow to #MeToo in Latin America
Early dogs may have doubled in size to protect livestock
Archaeological evidence suggests domestic canines bulked up between 8000 and 2000 years ago
Fonte de orgulho nacional, INPE luta para sobreviver
Cortes orçamentários, fuga de cérebros e ataques políticos desmoralizam um ícone da ciência sul-americana
THURSDAY 26. MAY 2022
Egg-eating humans helped drive Australia’s ‘thunder bird’ to extinction
Scientists link eggshell remains to giant Genyornis newtoni
First genome of Pompeii victim holds surprises
Man who perished nearly 2000 years ago had unexpected ancestry
Brazil’s space research institute, a source of national pride, is struggling for survival
Budget cuts, a brain drain, and political attacks have demoralized a beacon of South American science
Can happy labs increase diversity? Major funder bets big on young scientists
Hughes will lavish funding on 150 early-career scientists based on research excellence
WEDNESDAY 25. MAY 2022
These symbiotic shrimp ‘speed date’ to find new hosts
Shrimp evolved to live within unrelated hosts with similar structures
Japan tries—again—to revitalize its research
Latest effort would spend billions on a few universities, but skeptics give it long odds
TUESDAY 24. MAY 2022
Why yawns are contagious—in all kinds of animals
Evolutionary biologist Andrew Gallup explains why we yawn after others
MONDAY 23. MAY 2022
Scientists turn tomatoes into a rich source for vitamin D
Knocking out one gene boosts levels of a precursor to the essential nutrient
Watch salamanders ‘skydive’ in a wind tunnel
For a controlled descent in redwood trees, these salamanders pose like pros
Ph.D. students demand wage increases amid rising cost of living
Inflation intensifies longstanding issue of low student pay
SATURDAY 21. MAY 2022
Monkeypox outbreak questions intensify as cases soar
A rare smallpox relative has jumped from Africa to four other continents with a disproportionate number of cases in men who have sex with men
FRIDAY 20. MAY 2022
Microchips that mimic the human brain could make AI far more energy efficient
Neuromorphic chips could cut the power demands of digital assistants and other devices by orders of magnitude
Is the world’s oldest tree growing in a ravine in Chile?
Conifer is more than 5000 years old, scientist estimates. But some experts are skeptical
U.S. agencies remove more than 100 dogs from controversial breeding and research facility
Department of Justice files complaint against Virginia operation over dozens of care violations
Will you keep winning races into old age? Your cells hold clues
Senior athletes produce different levels of mitochondrial proteins from others
This little bot can hitchhike, swim, and swoop with ease
Using propellers, the robot can maneuver in the air and underwater
Ancient Maya tooth sealant glued gemstones in place—and may have prevented tooth decay
Organic adhesives could have warded off infections
THURSDAY 19. MAY 2022
What’s sending kids to hospitals with hepatitis—coronavirus, adenovirus, or both?
To guide treatment, researchers scramble for data on the cause of mystery liver disease