AI can predict fall risk in older people in belly scans

A new study from Mayo Clinic shows that artificial intelligence (AI) can help spot people who may be more likely to fall—even as early...

AI system can detect early signs of cognitive decline

A research team from Mass General Brigham has built one of the first fully independent artificial intelligence (AI) systems that can detect signs of...

A lost ice age giant speaks again—from inside a wolf’s stomach

Scientists have recovered the complete genome of a woolly rhinoceros that lived more than 14,000 years ago—and they did it using tissue preserved inside...

Whale hunting in south America began 5,000 years ago—far earlier than we thought

The history of whale hunting is much older—and more global—than researchers once believed. A new study shows that Indigenous communities living along the southern coast...

This gel-like material could boost battery life and prevent fires

Scientists at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory have developed a new kind of energy storage material that could make future batteries safer, more durable,...

Scientists print the world’s smallest infrared sensors—no silicon required

Engineers have created the smallest fully printed infrared light sensors ever made, opening a new path toward cheaper, smaller, and more flexible infrared technologies. The...

How a theory of the universe helps us understand blood vessels, brains, and trees

For more than a hundred years, scientists have puzzled over a simple question: why do natural networks—like blood vessels, neurons, tree branches, and plant...

How a 400-year-old shark keeps its vision sharp for life

In a quiet office at the University of California, Irvine, Dorota Skowronska-Krawczyk watches a grainy video on her computer. A massive Greenland shark drifts slowly...

A new study finds a subtle dance between dark matter and neutrinos

Time again for a tale of things dark and mysterious. A tale of dark matter. It's a well-told tale, but this time it involves...

Scientists make clean hydrogen from sunlight and water—no platinum needed

Hydrogen is often described as a dream fuel for a cleaner future. When it is used, it produces only water, not carbon dioxide. But turning...

Grasshopper wings spark a new way for robots to glide

Sometimes scientific breakthroughs begin in unlikely places. For a team of engineers and entomologists from Princeton University and University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, it started...

Hacking the unhackable? Why quantum computers need a new kind of cybersecurity

Quantum computers are often described as the future of computing. They promise enormous speed and power that could transform medicine, finance, materials science, and many...

FEATURED

Scientists could ease notoriously difficult chemical reaction

Constructing complex molecules from simpler ones is pivotal for the development of pharmaceuticals, materials science, and various scientific domains. But one reaction, known as the...

Scientists find a way to extract color from black

Scientists have developed a way of extracting a richer palette of colors from the available spectrum by harnessing disordered patterns inspired by nature that...

Sneeze cam reveals best fabric combos for cloth masks

During the COVID-19 pandemic, cloth face masks became a way to help protect yourself and others from the virus. And for some people, they became...

Scientists discover how ancient microbes use hydrogen for energy

An international team of scientists has made a breakthrough in understanding archaea, a type of ancient microbe that is a distant ancestor of humans. These...

MIT engineers develop a soft, printable, metal-free electrode

MIT engineers have developed a metal-free, Jell-O-like material that is as soft and tough as biological tissue and can conduct electricity similarly to conventional metals.