Inside the “out there” quest for a drug that would help doctors save lives before it’s too late.
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Want to get ahead at work? It ain’t what you say, it’s the way that you say it — and adaptability is essential.
He co-created one of TV’s funniest shows. He still felt like a failure in his 30s. This is comedian Neal Brennan’s story about conquering toxic self-talk.
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When what we predict and what we measure don’t add up, that’s a sign there’s something new to learn. Could it be a new fundamental force?
Forget these scientific myths to better understand your brain and yourself.
This biochemist is determined to create a new life form by reversing the shape of molecules.
∆G = ∆H – T∆S is one of the most abstract formulas in science, but it is also one of the most important. Without it, life cannot exist.
Quantum physics is starting to show up in unexpected places. Indeed, it is at work in animals, plants, and our own bodies.
A clock, designed and built in Europe, ran hopelessly at the wrong rate when brought to America. The physics of gravity explains why.
Forgetting and misremembering are the building blocks of creativity and imagination.
Calculating training ROI is rarely straightforward, but this article offers a few best practices for L&D professionals.
In general relativity, matter and energy curve spacetime, which we experience as gravity. Why can’t there be an “antigravity” force?
If you’ve looked for a job recently, you may have encountered the personality test. You may also have wondered if it was backed by scientific research.
Almost 18,000 projects, brought together on one clickable map.
Sometimes, going “deeper” doesn’t reveal the answers you seek. By viewing more Universe with better precision, ESA’s Euclid mission shines.
Without a solid understanding of the factors that affect the transfer of learning, the gulf between training and job performance is difficult to bridge.
The mountain can generate lenticular clouds, which may contribute to its supernatural reputation.
Some neuroscientists question whether the body can “keep score” of anything in a meaningful way.
In our Universe, matter is made of particles, while antimatter is made of antiparticles. But sometimes, the physical lines get real blurry.
Lots of people have seen lots of bizarre events and phenomena that defy our conventional experience. But is there a scientific explanation?
Even with all the recent impacts we’ve seen, it might be more “foe” than “friend” to us.
Whether you run the clock forward or backward, most of us expect the laws of physics to be the same. A 2012 experiment showed otherwise.
New tech is a double-edged sword. Integration can be expensive and perilous: Mess up the adoption and jobs are on the line.
A non-invasive method for looking inside structures is solving mysteries about the ancient pyramid.
Can two planets stably share the same orbit? Conventional wisdom says no, but a look at Saturn’s moons might tell a different story.
Most of us only ever see a fraction of a full rainbow: an arc. But optically, a full rainbow makes a complete circle. Physics explains why.
“It doesn’t erase what happened to you. It just changes the impact it has on your life.”
Can ChatGPT help you power through writer’s block?
Could we finally detect the elusive Unruh effect?
Computers are growing more powerful and more capable, but everything has limits