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ScienceDaily 2 place · 03/04/2025 20:38 EDT

Study reveals how rising temperatures could lead to population crashes

Researchers have uncovered a critical link between rising temperatures and declines in a species' population, shedding new light on how global warming threatens natural ecosystems. The study revealed that rising temperatures exacerbate competition within populations, ultimately leading to population crashes at higher temperatures. It offers one of the first clear experimental confirmations that rising temperatures alter the forces that control population dynamics in nature. Read more ›

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ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 03/04/2025 20:38 EDT

Cold atoms on a chip

Researchers are working to move cold atom quantum experiments and applications from the laboratory tabletop to chip-based systems. Read more ›

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ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 03/04/2025 16:44 EDT

Bad bitterness made better for everyone: Global taste differences in the flavor of medicines

Scientists examined the bitterness intensity of five medicines and two bitter modifiers in 338 adults of European descent and recent US and Canadian immigrants from Asia, South Asia, and Africa. Bitterness ratings differed by ancestry for two of the five drugs and the effectiveness of some modifiers. They also found genetic variants that explain some population differences in reaction to bitter tastes. Read more ›

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ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 03/04/2025 16:44 EDT

New computer vision system can guide specialty crops monitoring

Soilless growing systems inside greenhouses, known as controlled environment agriculture, promise to advance the year-round production of high-quality specialty crops, according to an interdisciplinary research team. But to be competitive and sustainable, this advanced farming method will require the development and implementation of precision agriculture techniques. To meet that demand, the team developed an automated crop-monitoring system capable of providing continuous and frequent data about plant grow Read more ›

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ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily 2 place · 03/04/2025 16:44 EDT

Iron oxides act as natural catalysts to unlock phosphorus to fuel plant growth

Plants and microbes are known to secrete enzymes to transform organic phosphorus into bioavailable inorganic phosphorus. Now, researchers report iron oxides can drive the same conversion at comparable rates as enzymes. The study adds yet another missing piece to nature's mysterious phosphorus cycle that can be used to fuel plant growth. Read more ›

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ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 03/04/2025 14:35 EDT

New hope for immunotherapy as prostate cancer treatment

Researchers used a double-pronged approach to reduce tumor growth in tissue samples of prostate cancer. Read more ›

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ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 03/04/2025 14:35 EDT

Study shines headlights on consumer driverless vehicle safety deficiencies

Researchers have demonstrated that multicolored stickers applied to stop or speed limit signs on the roadside can 'confuse' self-driving vehicles, causing unpredictable and possibly hazardous operations. Read more ›

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ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily 1 place · 03/04/2025 14:35 EDT

NASA's Hubble finds Kuiper Belt duo may be trio

The puzzle of predicting how three gravitationally bound bodies move in space has challenged mathematicians for centuries, and has most recently been popularized in the novel and television show '3 Body Problem.' There's no problem, however, with what a team of researchers say is likely a stable trio of icy space rocks in the solar system's Kuiper Belt. Read more ›

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ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 03/04/2025 14:34 EDT

Using computer science to save the bees

Researchers have created a system to help beekeepers monitor and analyze the health of their beehives and take corrective actions to prevent colony collapse -- when a majority of the worker bees abandon the colony and its queen. Beehives use thermoregulation to ensure the hive temperature stays between 33 and 36 degrees Celsius, about 91 to 97 degrees Fahrenheit. For example, bees might cluster to create insulation when it's cold... Read more ›

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ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 03/04/2025 14:33 EDT

New research shows impact of anxiety and apathy on decision-making

New research has uncovered that anxiety and apathy -- two common but distinct emotional states -- lead to fundamentally different patterns in how people learn and make decisions. Read more ›

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ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily 2 place · 03/04/2025 14:33 EDT

Researcher compares AI, human evaluators in swine medicine

A research team is studying whether artificial intelligence (AI) could play a supportive role in the evaluation of respiratory disease in pigs. Read more ›

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ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 03/04/2025 14:33 EDT

White blood cells use brute force to dislodge bacteria

A vivid new image is taking shape in the world of cell biology: Imagine bacteria adhering to the surface of a cell, perhaps at the site of an injury or wound. In response, a white blood cell arrives at the scene. This cell encircles the pathogen with its membrane, forming a tight, constricting ring. With remarkable force, the white blood cell yanks the pathogen off the wound's surface. The white... Read more ›

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ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 03/04/2025 14:33 EDT

Breakthrough with biofuel: How alcohol damages microbes that produce it

Researchers achieved a breakthrough in understanding the vulnerability of microbes to the alcohols they produce during fermentation of plant biomass. Read more ›

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ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 03/04/2025 11:43 EDT

Scientists unravel the spiraling secrets of magnetic materials for next-generation electronics

Engineers have developed a new computational approach to accurately model and predict the properties of a class of magnetic molecules called chiral helimagnets. Their work could accelerate the discovery of new materials for spintronics technologies. Read more ›

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ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 03/04/2025 11:43 EDT

Giant clone of seaweed in the Baltic Sea

Researchers have discovered that what was previously thought to be a unique seaweed species of bladderwrack for the Baltic Sea is in fact a giant clone of common bladderwrack, perhaps the world's largest clone overall. The discovery has implications for predicting the future of seaweed in a changing ocean. Read more ›

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ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 03/04/2025 11:43 EDT

Motion capture: M. mobile's motility apparatus clarified

The molecular structure of the motor component that powers the gliding apparatus of Mycoplasma mobile, one of the few mycoplasma bacteria that can move, has been revealed using cryo-electron microscopy. Read more ›

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ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 03/04/2025 11:43 EDT

Researchers unveil neuromorphic exposure control system to improve machine vision in extreme lighting environments

A research team has recently developed a groundbreaking neuromorphic exposure control (NEC) system that revolutionizes machine vision under extreme lighting variations. This biologically inspired system mimics human peripheral vision to achieve unprecedented speed and robustness in dynamic perception environments. Read more ›

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