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# ![@ScienceDaily Avatar](https://lunarcrush.com/gi/w:26/cr:twitter::18700629.png) @ScienceDaily ScienceDaily

ScienceDaily posts on X about in the, health, hidden, the first the most. They currently have [-------] followers and [----] posts still getting attention that total [-------] engagements in the last [--] hours.

### Engagements: [-------] [#](/creator/twitter::18700629/interactions)
![Engagements Line Chart](https://lunarcrush.com/gi/w:600/cr:twitter::18700629/c:line/m:interactions.svg)

- [--] Week [---------] +111%
- [--] Month [---------] -50%
- [--] Months [-----------] +776%
- [--] Year [-----------] +622%

### Mentions: [---] [#](/creator/twitter::18700629/posts_active)
![Mentions Line Chart](https://lunarcrush.com/gi/w:600/cr:twitter::18700629/c:line/m:posts_active.svg)

- [--] Week [---] -14%
- [--] Month [---] +5%
- [--] Months [-----] +584%
- [--] Year [-----] +97%

### Followers: [-------] [#](/creator/twitter::18700629/followers)
![Followers Line Chart](https://lunarcrush.com/gi/w:600/cr:twitter::18700629/c:line/m:followers.svg)

- [--] Months [-------] -2.20%
- [--] Year [-------] -3.10%

### CreatorRank: undefined [#](/creator/twitter::18700629/influencer_rank)
![CreatorRank Line Chart](https://lunarcrush.com/gi/w:600/cr:twitter::18700629/c:line/m:influencer_rank.svg)

### Social Influence

**Social category influence**
[countries](/list/countries)  [finance](/list/finance)  [travel destinations](/list/travel-destinations)  [technology brands](/list/technology-brands)  [social networks](/list/social-networks)  [stocks](/list/stocks)  [cryptocurrencies](/list/cryptocurrencies)  [currencies](/list/currencies)  [ncaa football](/list/ncaa-football)  [celebrities](/list/celebrities) 

**Social topic influence**
[in the](/topic/in-the), [health](/topic/health), [hidden](/topic/hidden), [the first](/topic/the-first), [ai](/topic/ai), [future](/topic/future), [university of](/topic/university-of), [has been](/topic/has-been), [food](/topic/food), [reduce](/topic/reduce)

**Top accounts mentioned or mentioned by**
[@socionextus](/creator/undefined) [@bikashraz003](/creator/undefined) [@jahnaviiyer](/creator/undefined) [@vishwadeep33](/creator/undefined) [@kimmeekmiller](/creator/undefined) [@rafaellugomd](/creator/undefined) [@neilflochmd](/creator/undefined)

**Top assets mentioned**
[Robot Consulting Co., Ltd. (LAWR)](/topic/robot)
### Top Social Posts
Top posts by engagements in the last [--] hours

"Rating Attractiveness: Consensus Among Men Not Women Study Finds ScienceDaily Hot or not Men agree on the answer. Women don't. There is much more consensus among men about whom they find attractive than there is among women according to a new study"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/06/090626153511.htm)  2026-02-14T10:51Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Study links full-fat cheese to lower dementia risk ScienceDaily Eating full-fat cheese and cream may be associated with a lower risk of dementia according to a large study that tracked people for more than [--] years. Those who consumed higher amounts of these foods developed dementia less often than those who ate little or none. Interestingly low-fat dairy products did not show the same pattern. Researchers caution that the findings show an association not cause and effect"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/12/251221091246.htm)  2026-02-06T13:44Z 300.7K followers, 21.2K engagements


"Wind farms can offset their emissions within two years After spinning for under two years a wind farm can offset the carbon emissions generated across its entire 30-year lifespan when compared to thermal power plants"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/05/240516122608.htm)  2024-05-16T12:00Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements


"Transgender kids show consistent gender identity across measures A study with [--] transgender children ages [--] to [--] indicates that the gender identity of these children is deeply held and is not the result of confusion about gender identity or pretense. The study is one of the first to explore gender identity in transgender children using implicit measures that operate outside conscious awareness and are therefore less susceptible to modification than self-report measures"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/01/150129132924.htm)  2015-01-29T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 531.8K engagements


"Citrus Juice Vitamin C Give Staying Power To Green Tea Antioxidants ScienceDaily To get more out of your next cup of tea just add juice. Citrus juices enable more of green tea's unique antioxidants to remain after simulated digestion making the pairing even healthier than previously thought"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/11/071113163016.htm)  2026-01-28T14:00Z 300.7K followers, 103.9K engagements


"Networks of the brain reflect the individual gender identity ScienceDaily Our sense of belonging to the male or female gender is an inherent component of the human identity perception. As a general rule gender identity and physical sex coincide. If this is not the case one refers to trans-identity or transsexuality. In a current study brain researchers were able to demonstrate that the very personal gender identity of every human being is reflected and verifiable in the cross-links between brain regions"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/01/150107082133.htm)  2015-05-03T13:00Z 300.7K followers, 531.8K engagements


"Babies' spatial reasoning predicts later math skills ScienceDaily Spatial reasoning measured in infancy predicts how children do at math at four years of age finds a new study. It provides the earliest documented evidence for a relationship between spatial reasoning and math ability"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/08/160817131930.htm)  2018-09-23T17:46Z 300.7K followers, 8.1M engagements


"Graphene just broke a fundamental law of physics ScienceDaily For the first time scientists have observed electrons in graphene behaving like a nearly perfect quantum fluid challenging a long-standing puzzle in physics. By creating ultra-clean samples the team at IISc uncovered a surprising decoupling of heat and charge transport shattering the traditional Wiedemann-Franz law. At the mysterious “Dirac point” graphene electrons flowed like an exotic liquid similar to quark-gluon plasma with ultra-low viscosity. Beyond rewriting physics textbooks this discovery opens new avenues for"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/09/250912081319.htm)  2025-09-12T12:55Z 300.7K followers, 294.5K engagements


"The last mammoths died on a remote island ScienceDaily Isolation extreme weather and the possible arrival of humans may have killed off the holocene herbivores just [----] years ago"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/10/191007081750.htm)  2019-10-14T16:37Z 300.7K followers, 478.9K engagements


"Fear of missing out impacts people of all ages ScienceDaily The social anxiety that other people are having fun without you also known as FoMO is more associated with loneliness low self-esteem and low self-compassion than with age according to a recent study"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/08/200826101624.htm)  2022-12-01T11:24Z 300.7K followers, 65.4K engagements


"Hundreds of new species found in a hidden world beneath the Pacific ScienceDaily As demand for critical metals grows scientists have taken a rare close look at life on the deep Pacific seabed where mining may soon begin. Over five years and [---] days at sea researchers documented nearly [---] species many previously unknown. Test mining reduced animal abundance and diversity significantly though the overall impact was smaller than expected. The study offers vital clues for how future mining could reshape one of the planets most fragile ecosystems"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/02/260201231230.htm)  2026-02-14T00:26Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"New study explains Antarcticas coldest temperatures Tiny valleys near the top of Antarcticas ice sheet reach temperatures of nearly [----] degrees Celsius according to a new study. The finding could change scientists understanding of just how low temperatures can get at Earths surface and how it happens according to the researchers"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/06/180625192640.htm)  2018-06-25T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 1.3M engagements


"A rusty green early ocean ScienceDaily How were Earth's solid deposits of iron ore created One researchers suggests that billions of years ago "green rust" formed in seawater and sank to the ocean bed becoming an original source of banded iron formations. While this would have been just one means of iron deposition green rust seems to have delivered a large proportion of iron to our early ocean"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/01/170131080007.htm)  2017-08-07T21:00Z 300.7K followers, 2M engagements


"Research on Iceman Wim Hof suggests it may be possible to influence autonomic nervous system and immune response New research on Iceman Wim Hof suggests that he can influence his autonomic nervous system and immune response through concentration and meditation. The results obtained are remarkable however the investigators emphasize that so far these results have only been obtained in a single individual. Therefore they can not serve as scientific evidence for the hypothesis that the autonomic nervous system and the immune response can be influenced through concentration and meditation"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/04/110422090203.htm)  2011-04-22T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 2M engagements


"Astronomers watch a massive star collapse into a black hole without a supernova ScienceDaily A massive star [---] million light-years away simply vanished and astronomers now know why. Instead of exploding in a supernova it quietly collapsed into a black hole shedding its outer layers in a slow-motion cosmic fade-out. The leftover debris continues to glow in infrared light offering a long-lasting signal of the black holes birth. The finding reshapes our understanding of how some of the universes biggest stars meet their end"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/02/260213223855.htm)  2026-02-14T07:09Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Scientists create robots smaller than a grain of salt that can think ScienceDaily Researchers have created microscopic robots so small theyre barely visible yet smart enough to sense decide and move completely on their own. Powered by light and equipped with tiny computers the robots swim by manipulating electric fields rather than using moving parts. They can detect temperature changes follow programmed paths and even work together in groups. The breakthrough marks the first truly autonomous robots at this microscopic scale"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260105165815.htm)  2026-01-06T17:45Z 300.7K followers, 237.5K engagements


"Researchers unlock secret of the rare 'twinned rainbow' ScienceDaily Scientists have yet to fully unravel the mysteries of rainbows but a group of researchers have used simulations of these natural wonders to unlock the secret to a rare optical phenomenon known as the twinned rainbow"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/08/120806151415.htm)  2014-05-30T00:22Z 300.7K followers, 506.9K engagements


"Change-6 lunar samples reveal a giant impact reshaped the Moons interior ScienceDaily A colossal ancient impact may have reshaped the Moon far more deeply than scientists once realized. By analyzing rare lunar rocks brought back by Chinas Change-6 mission from the Moons largest crater researchers found unusual chemical fingerprints pointing to extreme heat and material loss caused by a giant impact. The collision likely stripped away volatile elements reshaped volcanic activity and left a lasting chemical signature deep below the surface"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/02/260208011014.htm)  2026-02-12T21:11Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements


"How 40Hz sensory gamma rhythm stimulation clears amyloid in Alzheimers mice Stimulating a key brain rhythm with light and sound increases peptide release from interneurons driving clearance of Alzheimers protein via the brains glymphatic system new study suggests"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/02/240228114328.htm)  2024-02-28T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 2.2M engagements


"Killer whales learn to communicate like dolphins ScienceDaily The sounds that most animals use to communicate are innate not learned. However a few species including humans can imitate new sounds and use them in appropriate social contexts. This ability known as vocal learning is one of the underpinnings of language. Now researchers have found that killer whales can engage in cross-species vocal learning: when socialized with bottlenose dolphins they shifted the sounds they made to more closely match their social partners"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/10/141007111055.htm)  2025-09-13T18:45Z 300.7K followers, 644.1K engagements


"Love Me; Love My Jokes ScienceDaily Eric Bressler a graduate student at McMaster University who is studying the role of humour in personal attraction discovered in a survey of [---] students that to a woman"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2005/02/050212200527.htm)  2021-12-08T18:34Z 300.7K followers, 2.5M engagements


"Novel enzyme found in gut bacteria could revolutionize prebiotic research ScienceDaily Certain glycans -- sugar-like compounds with carbohydrate chains -- containing galactose may exhibit potential prebiotic properties that support human health. Identifying enzymes capable of breaking down these glycans is essential for unlocking their full potential. In a new study researchers discovered a novel enzyme in the human gut that specifically targets a previously unexplored glycan called -12-galactooligosaccharide known for their prebiotic benefits. This discovery can open new avenues in prebiotic"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/03/250306122911.htm)  2025-03-08T02:21Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Scientists win Ig Nobel Prize for cracking the code to perfect cacio e pepe ScienceDaily What started as a frustrating kitchen challenge turned into award-winning science: Fabrizio Olmeda and his colleagues scientifically decoded the secret of creamy cacio e pepe and earned the Ig Nobel Prize. Their research showed how starch can stabilize Pecorino into a smooth sauce turning a culinary mystery into physics-driven perfection"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/09/250918225012.htm)  2025-10-16T15:29Z 300.7K followers, 2.3M engagements


"Scientists discover protein that rejuvenates aging brain cells ScienceDaily A newly identified protein may hold the key to rejuvenating aging brain cells. Researchers found that boosting DMTF1 can restore the ability of neural stem cells to regenerate even when age-related damage has set in. Without it these cells struggle to renew and support memory and learning. The findings raise hopes for treatments that could slow or even reverse aspects of brain aging"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/02/260212025620.htm)  2026-02-13T12:30Z 300.7K followers, [----] engagements


"The Salton Sea -- an area rich with lithium -- is a hot spot for child respiratory issues Windblown dust from the shrinking Salton Sea harms the respiratory health of children living nearby triggering asthma coughing wheezing and disrupted sleep USC research shows. The problem is likely to intensify in a hotter climate with evaporation exposing more and more of the lake bed or playa leading to more dust events"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/11/241101183403.htm)  2024-11-01T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 244.7K engagements


"Brain's 'reward' center also responds to bad experiences ScienceDaily The so-called reward center of the brain may need a new name say scientists who have shown it responds to good and bad experiences. The finding may help explain the "thrill" of thrill-seeking behavior or maybe just the thrill of surviving it according to scientists"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/02/110222121913.htm)  2012-11-19T03:19Z 300.7K followers, 1.6M engagements


"Conducting the Milgram experiment in Poland psychologists show people still obey ScienceDaily A replication of one of the most widely known obedience studies the Stanley Milgram experiment shows that even today people are still willing to harm others in pursuit of obeying authority"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/03/170314081558.htm)  2019-01-04T21:01Z 300.7K followers, 174.4K engagements


"Black hole explosion could change everything we know about the Universe ScienceDaily Physicists may soon witness a cosmic fireworks show: the explosive death of a primordial black hole. Once thought to be unimaginably rare new research suggests theres up to a 90% chance of catching one in the next decade. Such an event would not only confirm Hawking radiation but also provide a complete catalog of all the particles in existence potentially rewriting our understanding of physics and the origin of the universe"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/09/250911073145.htm)  2026-02-12T13:30Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements


"Chinas artificial sun just broke a fusion limit scientists thought was unbreakable ScienceDaily Researchers using Chinas artificial sun fusion reactor have broken through a long-standing density barrier in fusion plasma. The experiment confirmed that plasma can remain stable even at extreme densities if its interaction with the reactor walls is carefully controlled. This finding removes a major obstacle that has slowed progress toward fusion ignition. The advance could help future fusion reactors produce more power"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260101160855.htm)  2026-01-04T22:49Z 300.7K followers, 47K engagements


"The ancient oxygen flood that forever changed life in the oceans ScienceDaily Ancient forests may have fueled a deep-sea oxygen boost nearly [---] million years ago unlocking evolutionary opportunities for jawed fish and larger marine animals. New isotopic evidence shows that this permanent oxygenation marked a turning point in Earth’s history — a reminder of how fragile the ocean’s oxygen balance remains today"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/08/250827010726.htm)  2025-08-31T11:02Z 300.7K followers, 640.9K engagements


"Close friends linked to a sharper memory Maintaining positive warm and trusting friendships might be the key to a slower decline in memory and cognitive functioning according to a new study. SuperAgers -- who are [--] years of age and older who have cognitive ability at least as good as people in their 50s or 60s -- reported having more satisfying high-quality relationships compared to their cognitively average same-age peers the study reports"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/11/171101191917.htm)  2017-11-01T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 2.1M engagements


"Sinking Coastline May Precede Large Subduction Zone Quakes ScienceDaily Some massive earthquakes like the one that generated the recent tsunami in South Asia are preceded by slight sinking along nearby coastlines two to five years before the rupture according to a new study by scientists from Dalhousie University in Nova Scotia the University of California Berkeley and the Alaska Division of Geological and Geophysical Surveys"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2005/01/050121110549.htm)  2026-02-10T15:00Z 300.7K followers, 11.4K engagements


"Blue-eyed humans have a single common ancestor New research shows that people with blue eyes have a single common ancestor. Scientists have tracked down a genetic mutation which took place 6000-10000 years ago and is the cause of the eye color of all blue-eyed humans alive on the planet today"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/01/080130170343.htm)  2008-01-31T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 8.2M engagements


"Mirror test The mirror test is a measure of self-awareness developed by Gordon Gallup Jr in [----]. The test gauges self-awareness by determining whether an animal can recognize its own reflection in a mirror as an image of itself. This is accomplished by surreptitiously marking the animal with an odourless dye and observing whether the animal reacts in a manner consistent with it being aware that the dye is located on its own body. Such behaviour might include turning and adjusting of the body in order to better view the marking in the mirror or poking at the marking on its own body with a"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/terms/mirror_test.htm)  2015-08-11T18:07Z 300.7K followers, 576.4K engagements


"Artificial Intelligence News Artificial Intelligence News. Everything on AI including futuristic robots with artificial intelligence computer models of human intelligence and more"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/news/computers_math/artificial_intelligence/)  2023-07-14T16:00Z 300.7K followers, 17.5K engagements


"Scientists reverse Alzheimers in mice and restore memory ScienceDaily Alzheimers has long been considered irreversible but new research challenges that assumption. Scientists discovered that severe drops in the brains energy supply help drive the diseaseand restoring that balance can reverse damage even in advanced cases. In mouse models treatment repaired brain pathology restored cognitive function and normalized Alzheimers biomarkers. The results offer fresh hope that recovery may be possible"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/12/251224032354.htm)  2025-12-25T12:15Z 300.7K followers, 274.5K engagements


"AI supercharges scientific output while quality slips ScienceDaily AI writing tools are supercharging scientific productivity with researchers posting up to 50% more papers after adopting them. The biggest beneficiaries are scientists who dont speak English as a first language potentially shifting global centers of research power. But theres a downside: many AI-polished papers fail to deliver real scientific value. This growing gap between slick writing and meaningful results is complicating peer review funding decisions and research oversight"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/12/251224032347.htm)  2025-12-25T12:15Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Ice age polarity reversal was global event: Extremely brief reversal of geomagnetic field climate variability and super volcano ScienceDaily Some [-----] years ago a complete and rapid reversal of the geomagnetic field occured. Magnetic studies on sediment cores from the Black Sea show that during this period during the last ice age a compass at the Black Sea would have pointed to the south instead of north. Moreover data obtained by the research team together with additional data from other studies in the North Atlantic the South Pacific and Hawaii prove that this polarity reversal was a"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/10/121016084936.htm)  2026-01-01T19:45Z 300.7K followers, 157.1K engagements


"Yellowstone wolves may not have transformed the national park after all ScienceDaily A new scientific review challenges the headline-grabbing claim that Yellowstones returning wolves triggered one of the strongest trophic cascades on Earth. Researchers found that the reported 1500% surge in willow growth was based on circular calculations and questionable comparisons. After correcting for modeling and sampling flaws the supposed ecosystem-wide boom largely disappears"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/02/260212025612.htm)  2026-02-14T01:48Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Wide-eyed fear expressions may help us -- and others -- to locate threats ScienceDaily Wide-eyed expressions that typically signal fear seem to enlarge our visual field making it easier to spot threats at the same time they enhance the ability of others to locate the source of danger according to new research"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/05/130501131657.htm)  2025-02-13T22:52Z 300.7K followers, 1.9M engagements


"Scientists found a hidden fat switch and turned it off ScienceDaily Researchers have discovered a previously unknown enzyme that plays a crucial role in fat production. By blocking it they stopped weight gain reduced liver damage and lowered harmful cholesterol levels in animal studies. The finding opens the door to a new kind of medication that could tackle obesity fatty liver disease and cardiovascular disease all at once"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/02/260206012226.htm)  2026-02-06T16:49Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements


"Orb-weaver spiders' yellow and black pattern helps them lure prey ScienceDaily Being inconspicuous might seem the best strategy for spiders to catch potential prey in their webs but many orb-web spiders which hunt in this way are brightly colored. New research finds their distinct yellow and black pattern is actually essential in luring prey"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/02/200211092550.htm)  2022-01-15T16:15Z 300.7K followers, 4.7M engagements


"This strange little dinosaur is forcing a rethink of evolution ScienceDaily A newly identified tiny dinosaur Foskeia pelendonum is shaking up long-held ideas about how plant-eating dinosaurs evolved. Though fully grown adults were remarkably small and lightweight their anatomy was anything but simplefeaturing a bizarre highly specialized skull and unexpected evolutionary traits. Detailed bone studies show these dinosaurs matured quickly with bird- or mammal-like metabolism while their teeth and posture hint at fast agile lives in dense forests"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/02/260203030521.htm)  2026-02-13T21:00Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"How Ants Find Their Way ScienceDaily Ever wondered how ants find their way straight to the uncovered food in your kitchen Now scientists have discovered how the humble wood ant navigates over proportionally huge distances using just very poor eyesight and confusing and changing natural landmarks. The research could have significant benefits in the development of autonomous robots and in furthering our understanding of basic animal learning processes"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2006/10/061018094651.htm)  2017-07-27T21:00Z 300.7K followers, 390.7K engagements


"Evolutionary surprise: Eight percent of human genetic material comes from a virus ScienceDaily About eight percent of human genetic material comes from a virus and not from our ancestors according to a new study. The research shows that the genomes of humans and other mammals contain DNA derived from the insertion of bornaviruses RNA viruses whose replication and transcription takes place in the nucleus"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/01/100107103621.htm)  2023-05-06T15:14Z 300.7K followers, [----] engagements


"Pinocchio effect confirmed: When you lie your nose temperature rises When a person lies he or she experiences a Pinocchio effect which is an increase in the temperature around the nose and in the orbital muscle in the inner corner of the eye. In addition when we perform a considerable mental effort our face temperature drops and when we have an anxiety attack our face temperature rises according to a pioneering study that has introduced new applications of thermography"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/12/121203081834.htm)  2012-12-03T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 4M engagements


"Sexual reproduction has another benefit: It makes humans less prone to disease over time ScienceDaily For decades theories on the genetic advantage of sexual reproduction had been put forward but none had ever been proven in humans until now. Researchers have just shown how humanity's predispositions to disease gradually decrease the more we mix our genetic material together. This discovery was finally made possible by the availability in recent years of repositories of biological samples and genetic data from different populations around the globe"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/02/150216125429.htm)  2015-02-22T21:00Z 300.7K followers, 24.8M engagements


"Is The Hippopotamus The Closest Living Relative To The Whale ScienceDaily Hippos spend lots of time in the water and now it turns out (or researchers argue) they are the closest living relative to whales. It also turns out the two are swimming in a bit of controversy"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/03/090318153803.htm)  2017-10-23T22:07Z 300.7K followers, 3.1M engagements


"Fusion reactors may create dark matter particles ScienceDaily Researchers say fusion reactors might do more than generate clean energythey could also create particles linked to dark matter. A new theoretical study shows how neutrons inside future fusion reactors could spark rare reactions that produce axions particles long suspected to exist but never observed. The work revisits an idea teased years ago on The Big Bang Theory where fictional physicists couldnt solve the puzzle. This time real scientists think theyve found a way"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/12/251228020014.htm)  2025-12-28T15:44Z 300.7K followers, 25.5K engagements


"Americas may be hit by catastrophic banana disease A researcher warned that a disease that has decimated Cavendish bananas in Africa the Middle East and Southeast Asia could be headed for the Western Hemisphere"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/06/150611161212.htm)  2015-06-11T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 492.4K engagements


"Time of day may determine the amount of fat burned by exercise ScienceDaily Physical activity at the right time of the day seems able to increase fat metabolism at least in mice. A new study shows that mice that did exercise in an early active phase which corresponds to morning exercise in humans increased their metabolism more than mice that did exercise at a time when they usually rest"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/02/230213201040.htm)  2023-04-29T21:15Z 300.7K followers, 365.2K engagements


"Research examines vicious cycle of overeating and obesity ScienceDaily New research provides evidence of the vicious cycle created when an obese individual overeats to compensate for reduced pleasure from food"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/09/100929171819.htm)  2012-11-19T03:19Z 300.7K followers, 1.6M engagements


"Mothers bear the brunt of the 'mental load' managing [--] in [--] household tasks ScienceDaily The study conducted in the US found that mothers take on seven in ten (71%) of all household mental load tasks"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/12/241212150327.htm)  2025-12-02T16:15Z 300.7K followers, 218.5K engagements


"Music aids Alzheimer's patients in remembering new information ScienceDaily Researchers have shown that patients with Alzheimer"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/05/100512112314.htm)  2020-01-09T23:30Z 300.7K followers, 4.6M engagements


"Easy Pants Zipper Pocket Tutorial: Step-by-Step Guide #versatilesewin #sewingdaily #sewinghacks"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/06/100630171711.htm)  2025-12-14T17:01Z 300.7K followers, 528.6K engagements


"Mankai duckweed plant found to offer health benefits ScienceDaily In this new study the researchers compared Mankai shake consumption to a yogurt shake equivalent in carbohydrates protein lipids and calories. Following two weeks of monitoring with glucose sensors participants who drank the duckweed shake showed a much better response in a variety of measurements including lower glucose peak levels; morning fasting glucose levels; later peak time; and faster glucose evacuation. The participants also felt more full"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/08/190805134034.htm)  2019-12-28T03:09Z 300.7K followers, 209.9K engagements


"Great Oxidation Event: More oxygen through multicellularity The appearance of free oxygen in the Earths atmosphere led to the Great Oxidation Event. This was triggered by cyanobacteria producing the oxygen which developed into multicellular forms as early as [---] billion years ago. As evolutionary biologists have shown this multicellularity was linked to the rise in oxygen and thus played a significant role for life on Earth as it is today"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/01/130117084856.htm)  2013-01-17T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 7.2M engagements


"Study provides new insight into origin of Canadian Rockies The Canadian Rocky Mountains were formed when the North American continent was dragged westward during the closure of an ocean basin off the west coast and collided with a microcontinent over [---] million years ago according to a new study"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/06/190606150328.htm)  2019-06-06T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 1.7M engagements


"How many species on Earth About [---] million new estimate says ScienceDaily About [---] million (give or take [---] million) is the new estimated total number of species on Earth -- the most precise calculation ever offered -- with [---] million species on land and [---] million in oceans. Announced by the Census of Marine Life the figure is based on a new analytical technique. The number of species on Earth had been estimated previously at [--] million to [---] million"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/08/110823180459.htm)  2016-02-06T17:39Z 300.7K followers, 1.9M engagements


"Sardine Run: Headlong race for survival of the species ScienceDaily Every year between May and July enormous shoals of the sardine Sardinops sagax give a splendid show as they migrate off the coasts of South Africa performing their Sardine Run. They are subjected to relentless attack by predators of all kinds -- sharks dolphins sea lions whales birds fishermen. Although well known to the general public this wholesale migration is still not well understood scientifically. Researchers have now examined the different hypotheses put forward to explain the event"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/12/101215102436.htm)  2022-02-08T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 150.8K engagements


"Small fish species evolved rapidly following [----] Alaska earthquake ScienceDaily Evolution can happen quickly. Consider a tiny fish species that evolved within decades -- both in its genome and external phenotypic traits -- after the [----] Alaskan earthquake"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/12/151214165724.htm)  2026-02-10T15:00Z 300.7K followers, 11.4K engagements


"Only [--] percent of American adults are metabolically healthy study finds ScienceDaily The prevalence of metabolic health in American adults is 'alarmingly low' even among people who are normal weight according to a new study. Only one in eight Americans is achieving optimal metabolic health. This carries serious implications for public health since poor metabolic health leaves people more vulnerable to developing Type [--] diabetes cardiovascular disease and other serious health issues"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/11/181128115045.htm)  2020-04-22T11:05Z 300.7K followers, 449.4K engagements


"Why did mammals survive the K/T extinction Picture a dinosaur. Huge menacing creatures they ruled the Earth for nearly [---] million years striking fear with every ground-shaking stride. Yet these great beasts were no match for a 6-mile wide meteor that struck near modern-day Mexico [--] million years ago incinerating everything in its path. This catastrophic impact -- called the Cretaceous-Tertiary or K/T extinction event -- spelled doom for the dinosaurs and many other species. Some animals however including many small mammals managed to survive"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/01/100131221348.htm)  2010-02-10T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 5.8M engagements


"Humans aren't always cut out to be creatures of the night ScienceDaily Nighttime hunters like cats and owls benefit from their big round eyes that let in plenty of light but humans have more limited abilities to see in the dark. A new article suggests that poor night vision is a common complaint that can be particularly vexing while driving"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/10/151026141643.htm)  2026-01-25T21:08Z 300.7K followers, 78K engagements


"Human and dog brains both have dedicated voice areas The first study to compare brain function between humans and any non-primate animal shows that dogs have dedicated voice areas in their brains just as people do. Dog brains like those of people are also sensitive to acoustic cues of emotion according to a new study"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/02/140220132152.htm)  2014-02-20T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 476.3K engagements


"The Introverted Girl Is Actually Mira of the Group Huntrix - Kpop Demon Hunter 🎨 Welcome to my art corner Im a freelance artist who loves bringing anime scenes to life through my own style. In this video Im recreating one of my favorite anime artworks capturing every detail color and emotion. If you enjoy my work dont forget to like comment and subscribe for more anime-inspired creations 🌸 #AnimeArt #FanArt #DrawingProcess #ArtVideo #AnimeDrawing"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/1999/07/990712080500.htm)  2025-07-01T17:45Z 300.7K followers, 671.1K engagements


"Interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS is spraying water across the solar system ScienceDaily For millions of years a frozen wanderer drifted between the stars before slipping into our solar system as 3I/ATLASonly the third known interstellar comet ever spotted. When scientists turned NASAs Swift Observatory toward it they caught the first-ever hint of water from such an object detected through a faint ultraviolet glow of hydroxyl gas. Even more surprising the comet was blasting out water at a rate of about [--] kilograms per second while still far from the Sunmuch farther than where most comets switch on"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/02/260211073047.htm)  2026-02-11T15:06Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements


"Why Tyrannosaurus was a slow runner and why the largest are not always the fastest ScienceDaily No other animal on land is faster than a cheetah -- the elephant is indeed larger but slower. For small to medium-sized animals larger also means faster but for really large animals when it comes to speed everything goes downhill again. For the first time it is now possible to describe how this parabola-like relationship between body size and speed comes about"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/07/170717115657.htm)  2021-09-21T12:14Z 300.7K followers, 230.3K engagements


"Scientists grow carbon nanotube forest much longer than any other Carbon nanotube (CNT) forests are a solution to scaling up the production of CNTs which are becoming a staple in many industries. However even the best catalyst used to grow these forests deteriorates quickly capping possible forest length at [--] cm. Now scientists have proposed a way to ensure longer catalyst lifetime and higher growth rate creating a CNT forest that is a record seven times longer than any existing CNT array"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/11/201104102219.htm)  2020-11-04T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 2.2M engagements


"New calcium-ion battery design delivers high performance without lithium ScienceDaily Scientists at HKUST have unveiled a major leap forward in calcium-ion battery technology potentially opening the door to safer more sustainable energy storage for everything from renewable power grids to electric vehicles. By designing a novel quasi-solid-state electrolyte made from redox-active covalent organic frameworks the team solved long-standing issues that have held calcium batteries backnamely poor ion transport and limited stability"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/02/260212234154.htm)  2026-02-13T07:07Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Raising giant insects to unravel ancient oxygen The giant dragonflies of ancient Earth with wingspans of up to [--] centimeters (28 inches) are generally attributed to higher oxygen atmospheric levels in the atmosphere in the past. New experiments in raising modern insects in various oxygen-enriched atmospheres have confirmed that dragonflies grow bigger with more oxygen or hyperoxia"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/10/101029132924.htm)  2010-10-30T11:00Z 300.7K followers, 6.1M engagements


"Daily eye drops could make reading glasses obsolete ScienceDaily Eye drops combining pilocarpine and diclofenac helped patients read extra lines on vision charts with effects lasting up to two years. The treatment could revolutionize presbyopia care as a safe non-surgical alternative to glasses"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/09/250914205832.htm)  2025-09-17T22:30Z 300.7K followers, 1.6M engagements


"Magnetic fields on the moon are the remnant of an ancient core dynamo A long discussed theory about the local magnetic spots of the moon suggests that they are the result of magnetization processes caused by impacts of massive bodies on the moon surface. A new study now shows that the Moon must have had an internal core dynamo in the past"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/10/201015173133.htm)  2020-10-15T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 122.9K engagements


"Rocky planet discovered in outer orbit challenges planet formation theory ScienceDaily Astronomers have uncovered a distant planetary system that flips a long-standing rule of planet formation on its head. Around the small red dwarf star LHS [----] scientists expected to find rocky planets close in and gas giants farther out the same pattern seen in our own Solar System and hundreds of others. And at first thats exactly what they saw. But new observations revealed a surprise: the outermost planet appears to be rocky not gaseous"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/02/260213223857.htm)  2026-02-14T07:09Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Why Dont Chimpanzees Like To Barter Food Scientists examines the circumstances under which chimpanzees our closest relatives will exchange one inherently valuable commodity (an apple slice) for another (a grape) which is what early humans must have somehow learned to do. The researchers found that chimpanzees often did not spontaneously barter food items but needed to be trained to engage in commodity barter"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/01/080130092136.htm)  2008-02-05T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 15M engagements


"Lack of interest in sex successfully treated by exposure to bright light ScienceDaily Exposure to bright light increases testosterone levels and leads to greater sexual satisfaction in men with low sexual desire. These are the results of a pilot randomised placebo-controlled trial"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/09/160918214443.htm)  2025-05-04T03:45Z 300.7K followers, 78.2K engagements


"Saving cavendish: Panama disease-resistant bananas Researchers have developed and grown modified Cavendish bananas resistant to the devastating soil-borne fungus Fusarium wilt tropical race [--] (TR4) also known as Panama disease"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/11/171115091806.htm)  2017-11-15T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 492.4K engagements


"Bipolar disorder: New method predicts who will respond to lithium therapy For roughly one-third of people diagnosed with bipolar disorder lithium is a miracle drug effectively treating both their mania and depression. Now a new develop tool has been developed to gauge success of preferred treatment for bipolar disorder"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/03/170320143837.htm)  2017-03-20T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 307.7K engagements


"A tiny light trap could unlock million qubit quantum computers ScienceDaily A new light-based breakthrough could help quantum computers finally scale up. Stanford researchers created miniature optical cavities that efficiently collect light from individual atoms allowing many qubits to be read at once. The team has already demonstrated working arrays with dozens and even hundreds of cavities. The approach could eventually support massive quantum networks with millions of qubits"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/02/260201223737.htm)  2026-02-02T15:49Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"One of worlds oldest sun dial dug up in Kings Valley Upper Egypt During archaeological excavations in the Kings Valley in Upper Egypt a team of researchers from the University of Basel found one of the worlds oldest ancient Egyptian sun dials. The team of the Egyptological Seminar under the direction of Prof. Susanne Bickel made the significant discovery while clearing the entrance to one of the tombs"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/03/130314085052.htm)  2013-03-14T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 199.7K engagements


"Live Oral Bacteria Found In Arterial Plaque ScienceDaily Gum disease has been linked to hardening of the arteries for nearly a decade and scientists have long fingered a gang of oral bacteria as the obvious suspects behind many cases of the vessel-clogging killer. Now University of Florida researchers have cornered the bacterial ringleaders of gum disease inside human artery-clogging plaque — the first concrete evidence to place the pathogens at the heart of the circulatory crime scene"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2005/03/050329134246.htm)  2022-11-19T11:00Z 300.7K followers, 15.1M engagements


"Why The Flu Virus Is More Infectious In Cold Winter Temperatures A new finding may account for why the flu virus is more infectious in cold winter temperatures than during the warmer months. At winter temperatures the viruss outer covering or envelope hardens to a rubbery gel that could shield the virus as it passes from person to person the researchers have found. At warmer temperatures however the protective gel melts to a liquid phase. But this liquid phase apparently isnt tough enough to protect the virus against the elements and so the virus loses its ability to spread from person to"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/03/080330203401.htm)  2008-04-01T11:00Z 300.7K followers, 6.6M engagements


"Childhood lead exposure linked to poor adult mental health ScienceDaily Lead exposure in childhood appears to have long-lasting negative effects on mental health and personality in adulthood according to a study of people who grew up in the era of leaded gasoline. The findings reveal that the higher a person's blood lead levels at age [--] the more likely they are to show signs of mental illness and difficult personality traits by age 38"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/01/190123112330.htm)  2026-01-26T19:27Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Slow down: Reduced speed limits save lives in busy cities ScienceDaily Traffic accidents are the leading cause of non-natural deaths worldwide. Lower speed limits may help prevent accidents. But speed-reduction policies can be controversial and effects are not well documented. A new study shows that speed reductions in So Paulo Brazil dramatically reduced fatal accidents and increased travel times only minimally"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/06/200611183912.htm)  2026-01-29T19:18Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"A quiet change in everyday foods could save thousands of lives ScienceDaily Lowering salt in everyday foods could quietly save lives. Researchers found that modest sodium reductions in bread packaged foods and takeout meals could significantly reduce heart disease and stroke rates in France and the U.K. The key advantage is that people would not need to alter their eating habits at all. Small changes to the food supply could deliver large long-term health benefits"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260131082433.htm)  2026-01-31T16:39Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"DNA marks in adults tracked back to changes in earliest days of life ScienceDaily Scientists have gained a glimpse of how marks on our genes that could be linked to adverse health outcomes in later life behave differently in the first few days after conception according to new research"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/07/180711144421.htm)  2018-07-15T10:32Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Marine darkwaves: Hidden ocean blackouts are putting sealife at risk ScienceDaily Scientists have identified a newly recognized threat lurking beneath the oceans surface: sudden episodes of underwater darkness that can last days or even months. Caused by storms sediment runoff algae blooms and murky water these marine darkwaves dramatically reduce light reaching the seafloor putting kelp forests seagrass and other light-dependent life at risk"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260114084115.htm)  2026-01-21T21:00Z 300.7K followers, 41.1K engagements


"Mix up plant species to keep soil healthy ScienceDaily Across the globe soils are under threat. Due changing land use to feed a growing population climate change and contamination of land with toxic chemicals this precious resource is deteriorating posing a serious threat to our future food security. When it comes to keeping our soil healthy maintaining plant species diversity is key according to new research"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/07/160727111933.htm)  2016-08-12T11:29Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"For chimpanzees salt and pepper hair not a marker of old age ScienceDaily Silver strands and graying hair is a sign of aging in humans but things aren't so simple for our closest ape relatives --the chimpanzee. A new study found graying hair is not indicative of a chimpanzee's age"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/07/200714182154.htm)  2025-01-01T04:43Z 300.7K followers, [----] engagements


"The overlooked survival strategy that made us human ScienceDaily Long before humans became master hunters our ancestors were already thriving by making the most of what nature left behind. New research suggests that scavenging animal carcasses wasnt a desperate last resort but a smart reliable survival strategy that shaped human evolution. Carrion provided calorie-rich food with far less effort than hunting especially during hard times and humans were uniquely suited to take advantage of itfrom strong stomach acid and long-distance walking to fire tools and teamwork"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260118233601.htm)  2026-01-23T17:16Z 300.7K followers, [----] engagements


"Europas ice may be feeding a hidden ocean that could support life ScienceDaily Europas subsurface ocean might be getting fed after all. Scientists found that salty nutrient-rich surface ice can become heavy enough to break free and sink through Europas icy shell delivering essential ingredients to the ocean below. The process is fast repeatable and works under many conditions. It offers a promising new explanation for how Europa could support life"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260122073620.htm)  2026-01-23T11:40Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements


"Fossil ankles indicate Earth's earliest primates lived in trees ScienceDaily Earth's earliest primates have taken a step up in the world now that researchers have gotten a good look at their ankles. A new study has found that Purgatorius a small mammal that lived on a diet of fruit and insects was a tree dweller. Paleontologists made the discovery by analyzing 65-million-year-old ankle bones collected from sites in northeastern Montana"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/01/150119154509.htm)  2015-01-20T12:36Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Intelligence is more accurate predictor of future career success than socioeconomic background study suggests ScienceDaily When intelligence and socioeconomic background are pitted directly against one another intelligence is a more accurate predictor of future career success researchers have found"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/03/120329142035.htm)  2026-01-28T23:06Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"How studded winter tires may damage public health as well as pavement ScienceDaily Scientists are reporting new evidence on how studded tires -- wintertime fixtures in some areas but banned in others for causing damage to pavement -- may also damage the health of motorists and people living near highways. Studded tires have small metal protrusions from the rubber tread that improve traction on icy or snow-covered roads"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/01/110105121137.htm)  2019-12-16T15:42Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Puffy baby planets reveal a missing stage of planet formation ScienceDaily A young star called V1298 Tau is giving astronomers a front-row seat to the birth of the galaxys most common planets. Four massive but extremely low-density worlds orbiting the star appear to be inflated precursors of super-Earths and sub-Neptunes. By watching how the planets subtly tug on one another scientists measured their masses and confirmed they are far puffier than expected. The system reveals how these planets dramatically shrink and transform as they age"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260131084135.htm)  2026-01-31T15:42Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Giant recently extinct seabird also inhabited Japan ScienceDaily Fossils discovered in Japan show that an extinct seabird called the spectacled cormorant that was originally thought to be restricted to Bering Island also resided in Japan nearly [------] years ago; indicating that the bird was a relict"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/07/180711093152.htm)  2018-07-16T08:10Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Three million years ago our ancestors were vegetarian ScienceDaily New research reveals that our early ancestors the Australopithecus lived almost entirely on plants and likely didnt eat meat at all. By analyzing the nitrogen isotopes in their fossilized tooth enamel scientists discovered a consistent herbivore-like dietary signaturemarking a significant insight into human evolution. This challenges long-standing theories that meat consumption was a driving force in early brain development"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/01/250117112232.htm)  2025-02-11T09:29Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Scientists find hidden pathways pancreatic cancer uses to spread ScienceDaily Researchers have discovered how pancreatic cancer reprograms its surroundings to spread quickly and stealthily. By using a protein called periostin the tumor remodels nearby tissue and invades nerves which helps cancer cells travel and form metastases. This process also creates a tough fibrous barrier that makes treatments less effective. Targeting periostin could help stop this invasion before it starts"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260129080432.htm)  2026-01-30T16:12Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Missing link found between brain immune system; major disease implications ScienceDaily In a stunning discovery that overturns decades of textbook teaching researchers have determined that the brain is directly connected to the immune system by vessels previously thought not to exist. The discovery could have profound implications for diseases from autism to Alzheimer's to multiple sclerosis"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/06/150601122445.htm)  2015-06-02T16:42Z 300.7K followers, 277.6K engagements


"Scientists trace fertilizer microplastics from fields to beaches ScienceDaily Plastic-coated fertilizers used on farms are emerging as a major but hidden source of ocean microplastics. A new study found that only a tiny fraction reaches beaches through rivers while direct drainage from fields to the sea sends far more plastic back onto shore. Once there waves and tides briefly trap the particles on beaches before many vanish again. This helps explain why so much plastic pollution seems to disappear after reaching the ocean"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260118233551.htm)  2026-01-28T11:43Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Rare damaging inherited mutations work together to reduce lifespan ScienceDaily Scientists report that the combined effects of rare damaging mutations present at birth have a negative impact on healthspan and longevity"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/04/200409113123.htm)  2020-04-10T17:44Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Ancient oceans stayed oxygen rich despite extreme warming ScienceDaily Scientists studying ancient ocean fossils found that the Arabian Sea was better oxygenated [--] million years ago even though the planet was warmer than today. Oxygen levels only plunged millions of years later after the climate cooled defying expectations. Powerful monsoons and ocean circulation appear to have delayed oxygen loss in this region compared to the Pacific. The discovery suggests future ocean oxygen levels may not follow a simple warming-equals-deoxygenation rule"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260129080422.htm)  2026-01-30T00:36Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Optimistic thinking linked with lower cognitive abilities ScienceDaily Optimistic thinking has long been immortalized in self-help books as the key to happiness good health and longevity but it can also lead to poor decision making with particularly serious implications for people's financial wellbeing"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/11/231130113228.htm)  2025-07-24T00:22Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"AI that can shoot down fighter planes helps treat bipolar disorder ScienceDaily The artificial intelligence that can blow human pilots out of the sky in air-to-air combat accurately predicted treatment outcomes for bipolar disorder according to a new medical study. The findings open a world of possibility for using AI or machine learning to treat disease researchers said"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/06/170612115337.htm)  2017-07-07T06:59Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"A simple blood test could spot Parkinsons years before symptoms ScienceDaily Scientists in Sweden and Norway have uncovered a promising way to spot Parkinsons disease yearspossibly decadesbefore its most damaging symptoms appear. By detecting subtle biological signals in the blood tied to how cells handle stress and repair DNA the team identified a brief early window when Parkinsons quietly leaves a measurable fingerprint"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260129080424.htm)  2026-01-29T14:31Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Surprise role for dopamine in social interplay ScienceDaily The chemical signal dopamine plays an unexpected role in social interactions new research shows. In mice nerve cells in the brain that release dopamine became particularly active in animals kept on their own for a short time"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/02/160211144057.htm)  2020-03-14T17:22Z 300.7K followers, 24.3K engagements


"Three Out Of Four American Women Have Disordered Eating Survey Suggests ScienceDaily Sixty-five percent of American women between the ages of [--] and [--] report having disordered eating behaviors according to the results of an online survey. An additional [--] percent of women report symptoms consistent with eating disorders such as anorexia bulimia nervosa and binge eating disorder meaning that a total of [--] percent of American women surveyed endorse some unhealthy thoughts feelings or behaviors related to food or their bodies"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/04/080422202514.htm)  2022-04-19T14:27Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"RNA for the first time recovered from an extinct species ScienceDaily A new study shows the isolation and sequencing of more than a century-old RNA molecules from a Tasmanian tiger specimen preserved at room temperature in a museum collection. This resulted in the reconstruction of skin and skeletal muscle transcriptomes from an extinct species for the first time. The researchers note that their findings have relevant implications for international efforts to resurrect extinct species including both the Tasmanian tiger and the woolly mammoth as well as for studying pandemic RNA viruses"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/09/230919153758.htm)  2026-01-13T18:21Z 300.7K followers, [----] engagements


"A 20-year-old cancer vaccine may hold the key to long-term survival ScienceDaily Two decades after a breast cancer vaccine trial every participant is still alivean astonishing result for metastatic disease. Scientists found their immune systems retained long-lasting memory cells primed to recognize cancer. By enhancing a key immune signal called CD27 researchers dramatically improved tumor elimination in lab studies. The findings suggest cancer vaccines may have been missing a crucial ingredient all along"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260128075345.htm)  2026-01-30T06:58Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Like venom coursing through the body: Researchers identify mechanism driving COVID-19 mortality ScienceDaily Researchers have identified what may be the key molecular mechanism responsible for COVID-19 mortality -- an enzyme related to neurotoxins found in rattlesnake venom"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2021/08/210824135358.htm)  2025-03-21T11:19Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Metallurgy likely has more than one birthplace ScienceDaily When and where did humans invent metal smelting Scientists have found the answer to this long-debated question in the history of technology. Metallurgy does not have a single origin but probably arose at various locations at about the same time. The experts reached this conclusion after re-examining the 8500-year-old copper slag and analysing the chemical composition of other copper artefacts from the Stone Age settlement of atalhyk in the Near East"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/09/170901113607.htm)  2026-01-18T22:11Z 300.7K followers, [----] engagements


"Your brain does something surprising when you dont sleep ScienceDaily When youre short on sleep and your focus suddenly drifts your brain may be briefly slipping into cleanup mode. Scientists discovered that these attention lapses coincide with waves of fluid washing through the brain a process that usually happens during sleep. Its the brains way of compensating for missed rest. Unfortunately that internal cleaning comes at the cost of momentary mental shutdowns"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260119234937.htm)  2026-01-28T08:00Z 300.7K followers, [----] engagements


"Satellites spot rapid Doomsday Glacier collapse ScienceDaily Two decades of satellite and GPS data show the Thwaites Eastern Ice Shelf slowly losing its grip on a crucial stabilizing point as fractures multiply and ice speeds up. Scientists warn this pattern could spread to other vulnerable Antarctic shelves"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/11/251130205511.htm)  2025-12-11T20:56Z 300.7K followers, [----] engagements


"CTE risk severity increases with years playing American football ScienceDaily The risk and severity of developing chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) increases with the number of years playing American football according to a new study. These findings reaffirm the relationship between playing tackle football and CTE and for the first time quantify the strength of that relationship"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/10/191007115239.htm)  2020-08-14T23:35Z 300.7K followers, 238.1K engagements


"3.2 million km/h galaxy smash-up A massive collision of galaxies sparked by one travelling at a scarcely-believable [--] million mph (3.2 million km/h) has been seen in unprecedented detail by one of Earths most powerful telescopes. The dramatic impact was observed in Stephans Quintet a nearby galaxy group made up of five galaxies first sighted almost [---] years ago. It sparked an immensely powerful shock akin to a sonic boom from a jet fighter -- the likes of which are among the most striking phenomena in the Universe"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/11/241121225909.htm)  2024-11-22T12:00Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements


"Cloves are best natural antioxidant Spanish study finds Using spices eaten in the Mediterranean diet as natural antioxidants is a good way forward for the food industry given the beneficial health effects of these products. This has been shown by researchers in Spain who have put the clove in first place"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/03/100316124231.htm)  2010-03-19T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 1.5M engagements


"Where does all Earths gold come from Precious metals the result of meteorite bombardment rock analysis finds Ultra high precision analyses of some of the oldest rock samples on Earth provides clear evidence that the planets accessible reserves of precious metals are the result of a bombardment of meteorites more than [---] million years after Earth was formed"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/09/110907132044.htm)  2011-09-09T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 401.8K engagements


"Why do sunbathers live longer than those who avoid the sun New research looks into the paradox that women who sunbathe are likely to live longer than those who avoid the sun even though sunbathers are at an increased risk of developing skin cancer. An analysis of information on [-----] Swedish women who were followed for [--] years revealed that longer life expectancy among women with active sun exposure habits was related to a decrease in heart disease and noncancer/nonheart disease deaths causing the relative contribution of death due to cancer to increase. Whether the positive effect of sun"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/03/160321135854.htm)  2016-03-21T12:00Z 300.7K followers, [----] engagements


"1.5-million-year-old fossil face is forcing a rethink of human origins ScienceDaily Scientists have digitally reconstructed the face of a 1.5-million-year-old Homo erectus fossil from Ethiopia uncovering an unexpectedly primitive appearance. While its braincase fits with classic Homo erectus the face and teeth resemble much older human ancestors. This discovery challenges long-held ideas about where and how Homo erectus evolved. It also hints at a complex web of migrations and possible mixing between early human species"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/12/251216081935.htm)  2026-01-03T21:58Z 300.7K followers, 32.9K engagements


"Pinpointing genes that protect against frailty ScienceDaily Frailty is a common condition associated with old age characterized by weight loss weakness decreased activity level and reduced mobility which together increase the risk of injury and death. Yet not all elderly people become frail; some remain vigorous and robust well into old-age. The question remains: why"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/08/140808123945.htm)  2014-08-12T09:42Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Pesticide linked to chronic kidney disease ScienceDaily A commonly available pesticide has been associated with an increased risk of chronic kidney disease (CKD)"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2021/10/211014100148.htm)  2022-10-29T00:29Z 300.7K followers, 35.2K engagements


"Scientists just overturned a 100-year-old rule of chemistry and the results are impossible ScienceDaily Chemists at UCLA are showing that some of organic chemistrys most famous rules arent as unbreakable as once thought. By creating bizarre cage-shaped molecules with warped double bondsstructures long considered impossiblethe team is opening the door to entirely new kinds of chemistry"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260122073618.htm)  2026-01-25T00:21Z 300.7K followers, 14.7K engagements


"Freezing blueberries improves antioxidant availability ScienceDaily Freezing blueberries may actually make them even healthier. A study from South Dakota State University found that ice crystals formed during freezing boost the release of anthocyaninsthe antioxidants responsible for the berries deep blue color and powerful health effects. These compounds help protect the body from cell damage and disease making blueberries one of the most beneficial fruits you can eat"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/07/140722124810.htm)  2026-01-29T19:56Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements


"Novel nanoantibiotics kill bacteria without harming healthy cells ScienceDaily The CDC estimates more than [---] million Americans experience antibiotic-resistant infections each year. To address this critical issue researchers recently investigated whether a series of novel nanoparticles can kill some pathogens that lead to infection without affecting healthy cells"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/01/220120091216.htm)  2022-01-23T08:27Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Brain Difference In Psychopaths Identified ScienceDaily Scientists have found differences in the brain which may provide a biological explanation for psychopathy"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/08/090804090946.htm)  2021-10-13T11:19Z 300.7K followers, 1.9M engagements


"Biohybrid hand gestures with human muscles ScienceDaily A biohybrid hand which can move objects and do a scissor gesture has been created. The researchers used thin strings of lab-grown muscle tissue bundled into sushilike rolls to give the fingers enough strength to contract. These multiple muscle tissue actuators (MuMuTAs) created by the researchers are a major development towards building larger biohybrid limbs. While currently limited to the lab environment MuMuTAs have the potential to advance future biohybrid prosthetics aid drug testing on muscle tissue and broaden the potential of"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/02/250212151423.htm)  2025-02-19T20:24Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"A breakthrough that turns exhaust CO2 into useful materials ScienceDaily Scientists have created a device that captures carbon dioxide and transforms it into a useful chemical in a single step. The new electrode works with realistic exhaust gases rather than requiring purified CO2. It converts the captured gas into formic acid which is used in energy and manufacturing. The system even functions at CO2 levels found in normal air"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260128230509.htm)  2026-01-30T01:53Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"This CRISPR breakthrough turns genes on without cutting DNA ScienceDaily A new CRISPR breakthrough shows scientists can turn genes back on without cutting DNA by removing chemical tags that act like molecular anchors. The work confirms these tags actively silence genes settling a long-running scientific debate. This gentler form of gene editing could offer a safer way to treat Sickle Cell disease by reactivating a fetal blood gene. Researchers say it opens the door to powerful therapies with fewer unintended side effects"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260104202813.htm)  2026-01-05T12:16Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements


"Preshistoric plumage patterns ScienceDaily An undergraduate paleontology student has discovered an Ornithomimus dinosaur with preserved tail feathers and soft tissue. The discovery is shedding light on the convergent evolution of these dinosaurs with ostriches and emus relating to thermoregulation and is also tightening the linkages between dinosaurs and modern birds"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/10/151028130854.htm)  2018-06-27T21:12Z 300.7K followers, 618.6K engagements


"Vitamin D may not be the great solution to health problems ScienceDaily A new review examines the evidence for [--] common beliefs about vitamin D. The beliefs range from the ability of vitamin D to reduce falls and fractures improve depression and mental well-being prevent rheumatoid arthritis treat Multiple Sclerosis and lessen incidences of cancer and mortality. The review finds little evidence though that supplementation with this vitamin has much of an effect at all"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/06/160616120528.htm)  2016-11-05T06:43Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Are Tigers 'Brainier' Than Lions ScienceDaily A wide-ranging study of big cat skulls has shown that tigers have bigger brains relative to their body size than lions leopards or jaguars"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/09/090911145030.htm)  2025-10-26T16:04Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements


"Researchers debunk myth of 'right-brained' and 'left-brained' personality traits ScienceDaily Neuroscientists now assert that there is no evidence within brain imaging that indicates some people are right-brained or left-brained. For years in popular culture the terms left-brained and right-brained have come to refer to personality types with an assumption that some people use the right side of their brain more while some use the left side more. Researchers have debunked that myth through identifying specific networks in the left and right brain that process lateralized functions"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/08/130814190513.htm)  2013-08-15T15:14Z 300.7K followers, 143.9K engagements


"The Brain Loses Neurons During Adolescence Researchers have found that adolescence is a time of remodeling in the prefrontal cortex a brain structure dedicated to higher functions such as planning and social behaviors. The study of rats found that both males and females lose neurons with females losing about [--] percent more neurons in certain brain regions than males"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/03/070314093257.htm)  2007-03-19T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 749.5K engagements


"Scientists finally explain statin muscle pain ScienceDaily Statins are a cornerstone of heart health but muscle pain and weakness cause many patients to quit taking them. Scientists have now identified the precise molecular trigger behind these side effects. They found that statins jam open a critical muscle protein causing a toxic calcium leak. The discovery could lead to safer statins that keep their life-saving benefits without the muscle damage"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260131084610.htm)  2026-01-31T15:42Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Eating meat may protect against cancer landmark research shows ScienceDaily A large study of nearly [-----] adults found no link between eating animal protein and higher death risk. Surprisingly higher animal protein intake was associated with lower cancer mortality supporting its role in a balanced health-promoting diet"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/08/250825015640.htm)  2025-08-26T01:40Z 300.7K followers, 30.5K engagements


"Gray wolves are hunting sea otters and no one knows how ScienceDaily On a remote Alaskan island gray wolves are rewriting the rulebook by hunting sea otters a behavior few scientists ever expected to see. Researchers are now uncovering how these coastal wolves adapted to marine hunting what it means for landsea ecosystems and whether this ancient predatorprey relationship is re-emerging as sea otters recover"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260129080446.htm)  2026-01-31T09:49Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Fish out of water: How killifish embryos adapted their development ScienceDaily The annual killifish lives in regions with extreme drought. A research group now reports that the early embryogenesis of killifish diverges from that of other species. Unlike other fish their body structure is not predetermined from the outset. This could enable the species to survive dry periods unscathed"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/06/240606152359.htm)  2026-01-27T21:00Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"How many Earth-like planets are around sun-like stars A new study provides the most accurate estimate of the frequency that planets that are similar to Earth in size and in distance from their host star occur around stars similar to our Sun"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/08/190814111903.htm)  2019-08-14T12:00Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Hearing and touch have common genetic basis: Gene mutation leads to impairment of two senses ScienceDaily New research shows that hearing and touch have a common genetic basis. In patients with Usher syndrome a hereditary form of deafness accompanied by impaired vision researchers have discovered a gene mutation that is also causative for the patients' impaired touch sensitivity"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/05/120501183021.htm)  2021-10-31T09:16Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"How blue and green clays kill bacteria ScienceDaily Since prehistoric times clays have been used by people for medicinal purposes. Whether by eating it soaking in a mud bath or using it to stop bleeding from wounds clay has long been part of keeping humans healthy. Now scientists have discovered the two key ingredients that give some natural clays the power to kill even antibiotic-resistant microbes"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/01/160111121446.htm)  2024-10-28T16:50Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements


"Significant ongoing decline in sperm counts of Western men ScienceDaily A rigorous and comprehensive meta-analysis of data collected between [----] and [----] finds that among men from Western countries sperm concentration declined by more than [--] percent with no evidence of a 'leveling off' in recent years. These findings strongly suggest a significant decline in male reproductive health that has serious implications beyond fertility and reproduction given recent evidence linking poor semen quality with higher risk of hospitalization and death"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/07/170726110954.htm)  2025-04-15T15:08Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Energy demands limit our brains' information processing capacity ScienceDaily Our brains have an upper limit on how much they can process at once due to a constant but limited energy supply according to a new study using a brain imaging method that measures cellular metabolism"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/08/200803140046.htm)  2021-12-07T14:26Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Scientists find hidden rainfall pattern that could reshape farming ScienceDaily New research shows that crops are far more vulnerable when too much rainfall originates from land rather than the ocean. Land-sourced moisture leads to weaker less reliable rainfall heightening drought risk. The U.S. Midwest and East Africa are particularly exposed due to soil drying and deforestation. Protecting forests and improving land management could help stabilize rainfall and crop yields"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/12/251211100633.htm)  2026-01-29T17:01Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Reading information aloud to yourself improves memory of materials ScienceDaily You are more likely to remember something if you read it out loud a study has found"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/12/171201090940.htm)  2024-10-24T13:01Z 300.7K followers, 115.7K engagements


"This spiders pearl necklace was living parasites ScienceDaily What looked like a pearl necklace on a tiny spider turned out to be parasitic mite larvae. Scientists identified the mites as a new species marking the first record of its family in Brazil. The larvae attach to juvenile spiders and feed on lymph through a weak spot in the spiders body. The discovery came from long-stored specimens suggesting many more species remain hidden in collections"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260127112139.htm)  2026-01-28T07:46Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"A once-in-a-generation discovery is transforming dairy farming ScienceDaily A Michigan dairy farm took a gamble on a new kind of soybeanand it paid off fast. After feeding high-oleic soybeans to their cows milk quality improved within days and feed costs dropped dramatically. Backed by years of MSU research the crop is helping farmers replace expensive supplements with something they can grow themselves. Demand has surged and many believe it could reshape the dairy industry"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260116035340.htm)  2026-01-19T11:58Z 300.7K followers, [----] engagements


"Did human hunting activities alone drive great auks' extinction ScienceDaily New insight on the extinction history of a flightless seabird that vanished from the shores of the North Atlantic during the 19th century has been published today"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/11/191126121215.htm)  2019-11-26T20:08Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Scientists found a survival switch inside brain cells ScienceDaily Findings could create new opportunities to treat and study neurodegenerative diseasesScientists discovered that sugar metabolism plays a surprising role in whether injured neurons collapse or cling to life. By activating internal protective programs certain metabolic changes can temporarily slow neurodegenerationhinting at new ways to help the brain defend itself"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260127010138.htm)  2026-01-27T22:49Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"New visual technique could advance early detection of neurodegenerative diseases ScienceDaily Researchers developed a new visual diagnostic technique that can be used to advance early detection for neurodegenerative diseases like Parkinson's disease and similar diseases that affect animals including Chronic Wasting Disease in deer"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/08/240806131224.htm)  2025-08-21T10:30Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements


"More teens than ever aren't getting enough sleep ScienceDaily Researchers found that about [--] percent of adolescents in [----] slept less than [--] hours a night which is [--] percent more than in [----] and [--] percent more than in [----]. They further learned that the more time young people reported spending online the less sleep they got. Teens who spent [--] hours a day online were [--] percent more likely to not sleep enough than their peers who only spent an hour online each day"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/10/171019100416.htm)  2017-10-28T15:06Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Earthquakes can systematically trigger other ones on opposite side of Earth ScienceDaily New research shows that a big earthquake can not only cause other quakes but large ones and on the opposite side of the Earth"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/08/180802102352.htm)  2018-05-04T09:49Z 300.7K followers, 150.7K engagements


"Can you teach koalas new tricks ScienceDaily Researchers have found that koalas are more clever than they thought them to be in a world-first study that tracked the Australian animal more comprehensively than ever before in suburban Brisbane"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/08/160804101628.htm)  2023-07-21T17:07Z 300.7K followers, 1.9M engagements


"Parents rank their obese children as 'very healthy' ScienceDaily Parents of obese children often do not recognize the potentially serious health consequences of childhood weight gain or the importance of daily physical activity in helping their child reach a healthy weight a study shows. "Parents have a hard time changing their child's dietary and physical activity behaviors" said the study's lead author. "Our study tells us what factors may be associated with a parent's motivation to help their child become more healthy.""  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/07/140721142129.htm)  2014-07-24T13:48Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"New state of quantum matter could power future space tech ScienceDaily A UC Irvine team uncovered a never-before-seen quantum phase formed when electrons and holes pair up and spin in unison creating a glowing liquid-like state of matter. By blasting a custom-made material with enormous magnetic fields the researchers triggered this exotic transformationone that could enable radiation-proof self-charging computers ideal for deep-space travel"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/11/251130205501.htm)  2025-12-07T13:00Z 300.7K followers, [----] engagements


"Creating smarter surgical robots ScienceDaily Providing surgical robots with a new kind of machine intelligence that significantly extends their capabilities and makes them much easier and more intuitive for surgeons to operate is the goal of a major new grant"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/10/131025185602.htm)  2013-10-26T05:28Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Birds and dinosaurs: High-performance breathing in bones ScienceDaily Dinosaurs are far from 'extinct' but dominate as birds still most regions of the globe. Part of this huge success is due to the evolution of air sacs which are crucial for the high efficiency of their respiratory system. Scientists have analyzed the structure of bones that are in contact with air sacs and found both in extinct and extant species a hitherto unknown type of bony tissue"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/01/180103100951.htm)  2018-06-27T21:12Z 300.7K followers, 618.6K engagements


"Red and processed meat consumption associated with higher type [--] diabetes risk study of two million people finds ScienceDaily Meat consumption particularly consumption of processed meat and unprocessed red meat is associated with a higher type [--] diabetes risk an analysis of data from [----] million participants"  
[X Link](https://sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/08/240820221808.htm)  2026-01-28T21:12Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Stars like the Sun dont just stop shining but this one did ScienceDaily A distant Sun-like star suddenly went dark for months stunning astronomers who quickly realized something massive was passing in front of it. Observations revealed a gigantic disk of gas and dust filled with vaporized metals swirling around an unseen companion object. For the first time scientists directly measured the motion of these metallic winds inside such a disk. The findings suggest that even ancient star systems can still experience catastrophic planetary smashups"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260124003813.htm)  2026-01-27T09:46Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Scientists say dimming the sun could spark global chaos ScienceDaily Scientists are taking the once-radical concept of dimming the sun through stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI) seriously but a Columbia University team warns that reality is far messier than models suggest. Their study reveals how physical geopolitical and economic constraints could derail even the best-intentioned attempts to cool the planet. From unpredictable monsoon disruptions to material shortages and optical inefficiencies every step introduces new risks"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/10/251021083631.htm)  2025-10-25T13:35Z 300.7K followers, [----] engagements


"Olympic broadcasting inequality: Olympics commentary differs based on gender race and nationality ScienceDaily Studies show Olympic Games' commentary differs based on gender race and nationality. Athletes who are white male and/or American receive more favorable coverage than females non-Americans and minorities"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/06/120618161903.htm)  2016-08-08T10:00Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"High exposure to glyphosate in pregnancy could cause lower birth weights in babies ScienceDaily Researchers are learning more about the effects of herbicide exposure during pregnancy"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/10/221017142505.htm)  2022-10-29T00:29Z 300.7K followers, 35.2K engagements


"Detection of an Earth-sized exoplanet orbiting the ultracool dwarf star SPECULOOS-3 ScienceDaily Astronomers have just discovered a new Earth-sized exoplanet around SPECULOOS-3 an 'ultracool dwarf' star as small as Jupiter twice as cold as our Sun and located [--] light-years from Earth. After the famous TRAPPIST-1 SPECULOOS [--] is the second planetary system discovered around this type of star"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/05/240515122831.htm)  2025-02-25T15:08Z 300.7K followers, 159K engagements


"New study challenges social medias mental health impact A new study has challenged the perception heavy social media use has a significant impact on mental health finding little to no relationship between the two. In fact not only does the research indicate the amount of time spent on social media has a negligible effect on mental health indicators such as depression anxiety and stress -- the result isnt always negative either"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/11/241106132656.htm)  2024-11-06T12:00Z 300.7K followers, [----] engagements


"A sudden signal flare reveals the hidden partner behind fast radio bursts ScienceDaily A repeating fast radio burst has just given up one of its biggest secrets. Long-term observations revealed a rare signal flare caused by plasma likely ejected from a nearby companion star. This shows the burst source isnt alone but part of a binary system. The finding strengthens the case that magnetars interacting with stellar companions can generate repeating cosmic flashes"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260127112135.htm)  2026-01-28T06:49Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Northwestern Medicines new antibody wakes the immune system against pancreatic cancer ScienceDaily Pancreatic cancer uses a sugar-coated disguise to evade the immune system helping explain why its so hard to treat. Northwestern scientists discovered this hidden mechanism and created an antibody that strips away the tumors protective signal. In animal tests immune cells sprang back into action and tumors grew much more slowly. The team is now refining the therapy for future human trials"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260114084129.htm)  2026-01-29T16:45Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Men From Early Middle Ages Were Nearly As Tall As Modern People Northern European men living during the early Middle Ages were nearly as tall as their modern-day American descendants a finding that defies conventional wisdom about progress in living standards during the last millennium"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2004/09/040902090552.htm)  2004-09-02T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 260.3K engagements


"Dermatologists say collagen supplements arent the skin fix people expect ScienceDaily Collagen pills sound like a shortcut to younger skin but solid evidence doesnt back them up. Higher-quality studies show little benefit and your body doesnt absorb collagen in the way ads suggest. Some supplements may even pose safety concerns and lack proper testing. Experts recommend focusing on proven habits like sunscreen retinoids and a nutrient-rich diet instead"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260129080443.htm)  2026-01-30T23:54Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Astronomers just watched a black hole twist spacetime ScienceDaily Astronomers have detected spacetime itself being dragged and twisted by a spinning black hole for the first time. The discovery seen during a stars violent destruction confirms a prediction made over [---] years ago and reveals new clues about how black holes spin and launch jets"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/12/251218060556.htm)  2025-12-21T08:10Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements


"Cancer patients who got a COVID vaccine lived much longer ScienceDaily A groundbreaking study reveals that cancer patients who received a COVID-19 mRNA vaccine within [---] days of starting immunotherapy lived dramatically longer than those who didn’t. Researchers from the University of Florida and MD Anderson Cancer Center discovered that the vaccine’s immune-activating properties may boost cancer-fighting responses acting like a nonspecific “flare” that reawakens the immune system"  
[X Link](https://sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/10/251019120503.htm)  2025-10-19T21:48Z 300.7K followers, 213.9K engagements


"Silk fibers improve bioink for 3D-printed artificial tissues and organs ScienceDaily Researchers processed silk fibers into a versatile component of bioink for 3D cell printing technology. Printed objects retain their shape better than those produced without the silk additive and the cells are not further damaged. This development will help advance regenerative medicine and drug discovery and potentially reinvigorate the silk industry"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/10/201008091626.htm)  2020-10-09T20:10Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Repeated febrile convulsions linked to epilepsy and psychiatric disorders ScienceDaily The risk of febrile convulsions increases with the child's fever and children who suffer from repeated febrile convulsions during their first year of life have an increased risk of developing epilepsy and psychiatric disorders later in life. This is shown by a comprehensive register-based study. In the study almost [-----] Danish children who have been suffering from febrile convulsions have been followed for more than [--] years"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/10/191015103408.htm)  2019-12-04T02:29Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Artificial Sweeteners Linked To Weight Gain ScienceDaily Want to lose weight It might help to pour that diet soda down the drain. Researchers have laboratory evidence that the widespread use of no-calorie sweeteners may actually make it harder for people to control their intake and body weight. Cutting the connection between sweets and calories may confuse the body making it harder to regulate intake"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/02/080210183902.htm)  2026-01-31T14:57Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Study finds popular 'growth mindset' educational interventions aren't very effective ScienceDaily A new study found that 'growth mindset interventions' or programs that teach students they can improve their intelligence with effort -- and therefore improve grades and test scores -- don't work for students in most circumstances"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/05/180522114523.htm)  2018-06-03T10:41Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements


"How dinosaurs may have evolved into birds ScienceDaily A possible genetic mechanism underlying the evolution of birds has been discovered by scientists. Studies of dinosaur fossils that show bird-like traits such as feathers light bones air sacs and three-digit forelimbs clarified evolutionary kinship of birds and dinosaurs. However identifying genomic DNA changes during this evolutionary transition has remained a challenge"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/05/170529142232.htm)  2018-06-27T21:12Z 300.7K followers, 618.6K engagements


"Scientists may have been wrong about what causes asthma ScienceDaily Asthma may not be driven by the molecules scientists have blamed for decades. Researchers have identified pseudo leukotrienes inflammation-triggering compounds formed by uncontrolled free-radical reactions rather than normal enzymes. These molecules were found at much higher levels in people with asthma closely tracking how severe their symptoms were. The finding hints at a new way to treat asthma by preventing the inflammatory spark instead of blocking its aftermath"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260127010147.htm)  2026-01-27T14:57Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Brief diversions vastly improve focus researchers find ScienceDaily A University of Illinois experiment shows that waning focus isn’t caused by a drained “attention tank” at all—it’s the brain getting bored. When volunteers tackled a mind-numbing computer task for nearly an hour their accuracy nosedived—unless they were interrupted twice by a tiny unrelated number-matching diversion. Those micro-breaks kept performance rock-steady hinting that the mind like the senses tunes out anything unchanging. Jolt it with a quick change and concentration springs back"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/02/110208131529.htm)  2022-01-15T16:59Z 300.7K followers, 681.4K engagements


"Ancient microbes responsible for breathing life into ocean 'deserts' ScienceDaily Billions of years ago Earth differed greatly from our modern environment -- the ancient atmosphere contained almost no oxygen. The life-supporting atmosphere we currently enjoy did not develop overnight. On the most basic level biological activity in the ocean shaped the oxygen concentrations in the atmosphere. New research shows that "oxygen oases" in the surface ocean were sites of significant oxygen production long before the breathing gas began to accumulate in the atmosphere"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/08/100823113436.htm)  2012-11-05T23:37Z 300.7K followers, 2.1M engagements


"A Trojan horse cancer therapy shows stunning results ScienceDaily Scientists at Mount Sinai have unveiled a bold new way to fight metastatic cancer by turning the tumors own defenses against it. Instead of attacking cancer cells head-on the experimental immunotherapy targets macrophagesimmune cells that tumors hijack to shield themselves from attack. By eliminating or reprogramming these bodyguards the treatment cracks open the tumors protective barrier and allows the immune system to flood in and destroy the cancer"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260128075332.htm)  2026-01-30T06:58Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Vaccine-resistant polio strain discovered ScienceDaily The global initiative to eradicate poliomyelitis through routine vaccination has helped reduce the number of cases by more than 99% in [--] years. However major epidemics are still occurring today. Researchers have identified the virus responsible for deadly and recent outbreaks and have sequenced its genetic material. The genetic sequence shows two mutations unknown until now of the proteins that form the "shell" (capsid) of the virus. On the face of it this evolution complicates the task for the antibodies produced by the immune system of"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/11/141104111408.htm)  2014-11-05T12:46Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Does caregiving cause psychological stress It depends says study of female twins ScienceDaily A newly published study shows that the associations between caregiving and different types of psychological distress (depression anxiety perceived stress and perceived mental health) depend largely on a person's genes and upbringing -- and less so on the difficulty of caregiving"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/01/140130141352.htm)  2014-02-07T21:34Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Scientists Use Bacterial Toxin To Kill Brain Tumors ScienceDaily Researchers at The Hospital for Sick Children (HSC) and the University of Toronto (U of T) have used a toxin produced by the same bacteria that cause hamburger disease to completely eliminate malignant human brain tumors grown in mice. The research is published in the June issue of the scientific journal Oncology Research"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/1999/07/990701070106.htm)  2025-05-28T17:15Z 300.7K followers, [----] engagements


"This fish-inspired filter removes over 99% of microplastics ScienceDaily Washing machines release massive amounts of microplastics into the environment mostly from worn clothing fibers. Researchers at the University of Bonn have developed a new fish-inspired filter that removes over 99% of these particles without clogging. The design mimics the funnel-shaped gill system used by filter-feeding fish allowing fibers to roll away instead of blocking the filter. The low-cost patent-pending solution could soon be built directly into future washing machines"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/12/251222044102.htm)  2026-01-27T21:00Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements


"Nanoparticles from tattoos travel inside the body scientists find ScienceDaily The elements that make up the ink in tattoos travel inside the body in micro and nanoparticle forms and reach the lymph nodes according to a new study. It is the first time that there is analytical evidence of the transport of various organic inorganic pigments and toxic element impurities as well as in depth characterization of the pigments ex vivo in tattooed tissues"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/09/170912093105.htm)  2022-06-11T13:31Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements


"Twinning is winning: Moms of twins live longer study finds ScienceDaily Compared with other mothers women who deliver twins live longer have more children than expected bear babies at shorter intervals over a longer time and are older at their last birth according to a new study. The findings do not mean having twins is healthy for women but instead that healthier women have an increased chance of delivering twins researchers say"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/05/110510211550.htm)  2017-07-13T16:00Z 300.7K followers, 2M engagements


"Solar chip monitors windows ScienceDaily A new kind of radio chip is intended to warn when windows are left open. This way you can avoid having the heat go out the window on cold days. The sensor also detects break-in attempts early on. The key: This maintenance-free chip powers up with energy supplied by solar power"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/01/150129094210.htm)  2015-01-29T21:16Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Ancient soils reveal clues to early life on Earth ScienceDaily Oxygen appeared in the atmosphere up to [---] million years earlier than we previously thought according to new research raising new questions about the evolution of early life"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/09/130925132317.htm)  2018-04-12T18:36Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Earliest-known arboreal and subterranean ancestral mammals discovered ScienceDaily The fossils of two interrelated ancestral mammals newly discovered in China suggest that the wide-ranging ecological diversity of modern mammals had a precedent more than [---] million years ago"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/02/150212141447.htm)  2015-02-23T10:00Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Sneezing sponges suggest existence of sensory organ: Discovery challenges assumptions about 'primitive' organism ScienceDaily Biologists have used a variety of drugs to elicit sneezes in freshwater sponges and observed the process using fluorescent dye. Their efforts focused on the sponge's osculum which controls water exiting the organism including water expelled during a sneeze"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/02/140206110152.htm)  2014-02-07T14:38Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Scientists finally explain Earths strangest fossils ScienceDaily The Ediacara Biota are some of the strangest fossils ever foundsoft-bodied organisms preserved in remarkable detail where preservation shouldnt be possible. Scientists now think their survival in sandstone came from unusual ancient seawater chemistry that created clay cements around their bodies after burial. This process captured delicate shapes that would normally vanish. The finding helps clarify how complex life emerged before the Cambrian Explosion"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260127010151.htm)  2026-01-29T05:30Z 300.7K followers, [----] engagements


"What cannabis really does for chronic pain ScienceDaily Cannabis products with higher THC levels may slightly reduce chronic pain particularly nerve pain according to a review of multiple clinical trials. The improvement was small and short-lived while side effects were more common. Products with little or no THC including CBD-only formulations showed no clear benefit. Researchers say more long-term studies are needed"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/12/251224015651.htm)  2026-01-31T17:14Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Back from the dead: Extinct fish rediscovered in a remote Bolivian pond after [--] years ScienceDaily A tiny fish long feared lost has resurfaced in Bolivia offering a rare conservation success story amid widespread habitat destruction. Moema claudiae a seasonal killifish unseen for more than [--] years was rediscovered in a small temporary pond hidden within a fragment of forest surrounded by farmland. The find allowed scientists to photograph the species alive for the first time and uncover new details about its behavior and ecology"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/12/251225080719.htm)  2026-01-27T21:00Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Scientists found the brain rhythm that makes your body feel like yours ScienceDaily A new study reveals that alpha brain waves help the brain decide what belongs to your body. Faster rhythms allow the brain to match sight and touch more precisely strengthening the feeling that a body part is truly yours. Slower rhythms blur that timing making it harder to separate self from surroundings. The findings could improve prosthetic design and immersive virtual experiences"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260114080325.htm)  2026-01-14T13:49Z 300.7K followers, [----] engagements


"James Webb catches an exoplanet losing its atmosphere in real time ScienceDaily Astronomers have captured the most dramatic view yet of a planet losing its atmosphere watching the ultra-hot gas giant WASP-121b for an entire orbit with the James Webb Space Telescope. Instead of a single stream of escaping gas the planet is wrapped in two colossal helium tailsone trailing behind like a comet the other stretching ahead toward its star"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260120000311.htm)  2026-01-20T13:02Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements


"CRISPR uncovers gene that supercharges vitamin D—and stops tumors in their tracks ScienceDaily A gene called SDR42E1 has been identified as a key player in how our bodies absorb and process vitamin D. Researchers found that disabling this gene in colorectal cancer cells not only crippled their survival but also disrupted thousands of other genes tied to cancer and metabolism. This opens the door to highly targeted cancer therapies—by either cutting off vitamin D supply to tumors or enhancing the gene’s activity to boost health. The findings hint at vast possibilities in"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/07/250718031208.htm)  2025-07-19T21:29Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements


"This AI spots dangerous blood cells doctors often miss ScienceDaily A generative AI system can now analyze blood cells with greater accuracy and confidence than human experts detecting subtle signs of diseases like leukemia. It not only spots rare abnormalities but also recognizes its own uncertainty making it a powerful support tool for clinicians"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260112214317.htm)  2026-01-13T14:13Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements


"Expecting to teach enhances learning recall ScienceDaily People learn better and recall more when given the impression that they will soon have to teach newly acquired material to someone else suggests new research. Findings of the study suggest that simply telling learners that they would later teach another student changes their mindset enough so that they engage in more effective approaches to learning than did their peers who simply expected a test"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/08/140808163445.htm)  2026-01-21T08:15Z 300.7K followers, 61.8K engagements


"New study model with clues to anti-aging ScienceDaily Scientists have created genetically-engineered mice that could help accelerate anti-aging research"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/02/250204132437.htm)  2025-09-25T11:01Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"NASAs Perseverance rover completes the first AI-planned drive on Mars ScienceDaily NASAs Perseverance rover has just made history by driving across Mars using routes planned by artificial intelligence instead of human operators. A vision-capable AI analyzed the same images and terrain data normally used by rover planners identified hazards like rocks and sand ripples and charted a safe path across the Martian surface. After extensive testing in a virtual replica of the rover Perseverance successfully followed the AI-generated routes traveling hundreds of feet autonomously"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260131084555.htm)  2026-02-03T02:00Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements


"Earths atmosphere came from outer space scientists find The gases which formed the Earths atmosphere -- and probably its oceans -- did not come from inside the Earth but from outer space according to a new study"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/12/091210153538.htm)  2009-12-11T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 199.2K engagements


"Baby knows best: Baby-led weaning promotes healthy food preferences ScienceDaily A new study has shown that babies who are weaned using solid finger food are more likely to develop healthier food preferences and are less likely to become overweight as children than those who are spoon-fed pureed food"  
[X Link](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/02/120209135842.htm)  2022-09-06T14:07Z 300.7K followers, 358.8K engagements

Limited data mode. Full metrics available with subscription: lunarcrush.com/pricing

@ScienceDaily Avatar @ScienceDaily ScienceDaily

ScienceDaily posts on X about in the, health, hidden, the first the most. They currently have [-------] followers and [----] posts still getting attention that total [-------] engagements in the last [--] hours.

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Social Influence

Social category influence countries finance travel destinations technology brands social networks stocks cryptocurrencies currencies ncaa football celebrities

Social topic influence in the, health, hidden, the first, ai, future, university of, has been, food, reduce

Top accounts mentioned or mentioned by @socionextus @bikashraz003 @jahnaviiyer @vishwadeep33 @kimmeekmiller @rafaellugomd @neilflochmd

Top assets mentioned Robot Consulting Co., Ltd. (LAWR)

Top Social Posts

Top posts by engagements in the last [--] hours

"Rating Attractiveness: Consensus Among Men Not Women Study Finds ScienceDaily Hot or not Men agree on the answer. Women don't. There is much more consensus among men about whom they find attractive than there is among women according to a new study"
X Link 2026-02-14T10:51Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Study links full-fat cheese to lower dementia risk ScienceDaily Eating full-fat cheese and cream may be associated with a lower risk of dementia according to a large study that tracked people for more than [--] years. Those who consumed higher amounts of these foods developed dementia less often than those who ate little or none. Interestingly low-fat dairy products did not show the same pattern. Researchers caution that the findings show an association not cause and effect"
X Link 2026-02-06T13:44Z 300.7K followers, 21.2K engagements

"Wind farms can offset their emissions within two years After spinning for under two years a wind farm can offset the carbon emissions generated across its entire 30-year lifespan when compared to thermal power plants"
X Link 2024-05-16T12:00Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements

"Transgender kids show consistent gender identity across measures A study with [--] transgender children ages [--] to [--] indicates that the gender identity of these children is deeply held and is not the result of confusion about gender identity or pretense. The study is one of the first to explore gender identity in transgender children using implicit measures that operate outside conscious awareness and are therefore less susceptible to modification than self-report measures"
X Link 2015-01-29T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 531.8K engagements

"Citrus Juice Vitamin C Give Staying Power To Green Tea Antioxidants ScienceDaily To get more out of your next cup of tea just add juice. Citrus juices enable more of green tea's unique antioxidants to remain after simulated digestion making the pairing even healthier than previously thought"
X Link 2026-01-28T14:00Z 300.7K followers, 103.9K engagements

"Networks of the brain reflect the individual gender identity ScienceDaily Our sense of belonging to the male or female gender is an inherent component of the human identity perception. As a general rule gender identity and physical sex coincide. If this is not the case one refers to trans-identity or transsexuality. In a current study brain researchers were able to demonstrate that the very personal gender identity of every human being is reflected and verifiable in the cross-links between brain regions"
X Link 2015-05-03T13:00Z 300.7K followers, 531.8K engagements

"Babies' spatial reasoning predicts later math skills ScienceDaily Spatial reasoning measured in infancy predicts how children do at math at four years of age finds a new study. It provides the earliest documented evidence for a relationship between spatial reasoning and math ability"
X Link 2018-09-23T17:46Z 300.7K followers, 8.1M engagements

"Graphene just broke a fundamental law of physics ScienceDaily For the first time scientists have observed electrons in graphene behaving like a nearly perfect quantum fluid challenging a long-standing puzzle in physics. By creating ultra-clean samples the team at IISc uncovered a surprising decoupling of heat and charge transport shattering the traditional Wiedemann-Franz law. At the mysterious “Dirac point” graphene electrons flowed like an exotic liquid similar to quark-gluon plasma with ultra-low viscosity. Beyond rewriting physics textbooks this discovery opens new avenues for"
X Link 2025-09-12T12:55Z 300.7K followers, 294.5K engagements

"The last mammoths died on a remote island ScienceDaily Isolation extreme weather and the possible arrival of humans may have killed off the holocene herbivores just [----] years ago"
X Link 2019-10-14T16:37Z 300.7K followers, 478.9K engagements

"Fear of missing out impacts people of all ages ScienceDaily The social anxiety that other people are having fun without you also known as FoMO is more associated with loneliness low self-esteem and low self-compassion than with age according to a recent study"
X Link 2022-12-01T11:24Z 300.7K followers, 65.4K engagements

"Hundreds of new species found in a hidden world beneath the Pacific ScienceDaily As demand for critical metals grows scientists have taken a rare close look at life on the deep Pacific seabed where mining may soon begin. Over five years and [---] days at sea researchers documented nearly [---] species many previously unknown. Test mining reduced animal abundance and diversity significantly though the overall impact was smaller than expected. The study offers vital clues for how future mining could reshape one of the planets most fragile ecosystems"
X Link 2026-02-14T00:26Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"New study explains Antarcticas coldest temperatures Tiny valleys near the top of Antarcticas ice sheet reach temperatures of nearly [----] degrees Celsius according to a new study. The finding could change scientists understanding of just how low temperatures can get at Earths surface and how it happens according to the researchers"
X Link 2018-06-25T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 1.3M engagements

"A rusty green early ocean ScienceDaily How were Earth's solid deposits of iron ore created One researchers suggests that billions of years ago "green rust" formed in seawater and sank to the ocean bed becoming an original source of banded iron formations. While this would have been just one means of iron deposition green rust seems to have delivered a large proportion of iron to our early ocean"
X Link 2017-08-07T21:00Z 300.7K followers, 2M engagements

"Research on Iceman Wim Hof suggests it may be possible to influence autonomic nervous system and immune response New research on Iceman Wim Hof suggests that he can influence his autonomic nervous system and immune response through concentration and meditation. The results obtained are remarkable however the investigators emphasize that so far these results have only been obtained in a single individual. Therefore they can not serve as scientific evidence for the hypothesis that the autonomic nervous system and the immune response can be influenced through concentration and meditation"
X Link 2011-04-22T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 2M engagements

"Astronomers watch a massive star collapse into a black hole without a supernova ScienceDaily A massive star [---] million light-years away simply vanished and astronomers now know why. Instead of exploding in a supernova it quietly collapsed into a black hole shedding its outer layers in a slow-motion cosmic fade-out. The leftover debris continues to glow in infrared light offering a long-lasting signal of the black holes birth. The finding reshapes our understanding of how some of the universes biggest stars meet their end"
X Link 2026-02-14T07:09Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Scientists create robots smaller than a grain of salt that can think ScienceDaily Researchers have created microscopic robots so small theyre barely visible yet smart enough to sense decide and move completely on their own. Powered by light and equipped with tiny computers the robots swim by manipulating electric fields rather than using moving parts. They can detect temperature changes follow programmed paths and even work together in groups. The breakthrough marks the first truly autonomous robots at this microscopic scale"
X Link 2026-01-06T17:45Z 300.7K followers, 237.5K engagements

"Researchers unlock secret of the rare 'twinned rainbow' ScienceDaily Scientists have yet to fully unravel the mysteries of rainbows but a group of researchers have used simulations of these natural wonders to unlock the secret to a rare optical phenomenon known as the twinned rainbow"
X Link 2014-05-30T00:22Z 300.7K followers, 506.9K engagements

"Change-6 lunar samples reveal a giant impact reshaped the Moons interior ScienceDaily A colossal ancient impact may have reshaped the Moon far more deeply than scientists once realized. By analyzing rare lunar rocks brought back by Chinas Change-6 mission from the Moons largest crater researchers found unusual chemical fingerprints pointing to extreme heat and material loss caused by a giant impact. The collision likely stripped away volatile elements reshaped volcanic activity and left a lasting chemical signature deep below the surface"
X Link 2026-02-12T21:11Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements

"How 40Hz sensory gamma rhythm stimulation clears amyloid in Alzheimers mice Stimulating a key brain rhythm with light and sound increases peptide release from interneurons driving clearance of Alzheimers protein via the brains glymphatic system new study suggests"
X Link 2024-02-28T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 2.2M engagements

"Killer whales learn to communicate like dolphins ScienceDaily The sounds that most animals use to communicate are innate not learned. However a few species including humans can imitate new sounds and use them in appropriate social contexts. This ability known as vocal learning is one of the underpinnings of language. Now researchers have found that killer whales can engage in cross-species vocal learning: when socialized with bottlenose dolphins they shifted the sounds they made to more closely match their social partners"
X Link 2025-09-13T18:45Z 300.7K followers, 644.1K engagements

"Love Me; Love My Jokes ScienceDaily Eric Bressler a graduate student at McMaster University who is studying the role of humour in personal attraction discovered in a survey of [---] students that to a woman"
X Link 2021-12-08T18:34Z 300.7K followers, 2.5M engagements

"Novel enzyme found in gut bacteria could revolutionize prebiotic research ScienceDaily Certain glycans -- sugar-like compounds with carbohydrate chains -- containing galactose may exhibit potential prebiotic properties that support human health. Identifying enzymes capable of breaking down these glycans is essential for unlocking their full potential. In a new study researchers discovered a novel enzyme in the human gut that specifically targets a previously unexplored glycan called -12-galactooligosaccharide known for their prebiotic benefits. This discovery can open new avenues in prebiotic"
X Link 2025-03-08T02:21Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Scientists win Ig Nobel Prize for cracking the code to perfect cacio e pepe ScienceDaily What started as a frustrating kitchen challenge turned into award-winning science: Fabrizio Olmeda and his colleagues scientifically decoded the secret of creamy cacio e pepe and earned the Ig Nobel Prize. Their research showed how starch can stabilize Pecorino into a smooth sauce turning a culinary mystery into physics-driven perfection"
X Link 2025-10-16T15:29Z 300.7K followers, 2.3M engagements

"Scientists discover protein that rejuvenates aging brain cells ScienceDaily A newly identified protein may hold the key to rejuvenating aging brain cells. Researchers found that boosting DMTF1 can restore the ability of neural stem cells to regenerate even when age-related damage has set in. Without it these cells struggle to renew and support memory and learning. The findings raise hopes for treatments that could slow or even reverse aspects of brain aging"
X Link 2026-02-13T12:30Z 300.7K followers, [----] engagements

"The Salton Sea -- an area rich with lithium -- is a hot spot for child respiratory issues Windblown dust from the shrinking Salton Sea harms the respiratory health of children living nearby triggering asthma coughing wheezing and disrupted sleep USC research shows. The problem is likely to intensify in a hotter climate with evaporation exposing more and more of the lake bed or playa leading to more dust events"
X Link 2024-11-01T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 244.7K engagements

"Brain's 'reward' center also responds to bad experiences ScienceDaily The so-called reward center of the brain may need a new name say scientists who have shown it responds to good and bad experiences. The finding may help explain the "thrill" of thrill-seeking behavior or maybe just the thrill of surviving it according to scientists"
X Link 2012-11-19T03:19Z 300.7K followers, 1.6M engagements

"Conducting the Milgram experiment in Poland psychologists show people still obey ScienceDaily A replication of one of the most widely known obedience studies the Stanley Milgram experiment shows that even today people are still willing to harm others in pursuit of obeying authority"
X Link 2019-01-04T21:01Z 300.7K followers, 174.4K engagements

"Black hole explosion could change everything we know about the Universe ScienceDaily Physicists may soon witness a cosmic fireworks show: the explosive death of a primordial black hole. Once thought to be unimaginably rare new research suggests theres up to a 90% chance of catching one in the next decade. Such an event would not only confirm Hawking radiation but also provide a complete catalog of all the particles in existence potentially rewriting our understanding of physics and the origin of the universe"
X Link 2026-02-12T13:30Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements

"Chinas artificial sun just broke a fusion limit scientists thought was unbreakable ScienceDaily Researchers using Chinas artificial sun fusion reactor have broken through a long-standing density barrier in fusion plasma. The experiment confirmed that plasma can remain stable even at extreme densities if its interaction with the reactor walls is carefully controlled. This finding removes a major obstacle that has slowed progress toward fusion ignition. The advance could help future fusion reactors produce more power"
X Link 2026-01-04T22:49Z 300.7K followers, 47K engagements

"The ancient oxygen flood that forever changed life in the oceans ScienceDaily Ancient forests may have fueled a deep-sea oxygen boost nearly [---] million years ago unlocking evolutionary opportunities for jawed fish and larger marine animals. New isotopic evidence shows that this permanent oxygenation marked a turning point in Earth’s history — a reminder of how fragile the ocean’s oxygen balance remains today"
X Link 2025-08-31T11:02Z 300.7K followers, 640.9K engagements

"Close friends linked to a sharper memory Maintaining positive warm and trusting friendships might be the key to a slower decline in memory and cognitive functioning according to a new study. SuperAgers -- who are [--] years of age and older who have cognitive ability at least as good as people in their 50s or 60s -- reported having more satisfying high-quality relationships compared to their cognitively average same-age peers the study reports"
X Link 2017-11-01T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 2.1M engagements

"Sinking Coastline May Precede Large Subduction Zone Quakes ScienceDaily Some massive earthquakes like the one that generated the recent tsunami in South Asia are preceded by slight sinking along nearby coastlines two to five years before the rupture according to a new study by scientists from Dalhousie University in Nova Scotia the University of California Berkeley and the Alaska Division of Geological and Geophysical Surveys"
X Link 2026-02-10T15:00Z 300.7K followers, 11.4K engagements

"Blue-eyed humans have a single common ancestor New research shows that people with blue eyes have a single common ancestor. Scientists have tracked down a genetic mutation which took place 6000-10000 years ago and is the cause of the eye color of all blue-eyed humans alive on the planet today"
X Link 2008-01-31T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 8.2M engagements

"Mirror test The mirror test is a measure of self-awareness developed by Gordon Gallup Jr in [----]. The test gauges self-awareness by determining whether an animal can recognize its own reflection in a mirror as an image of itself. This is accomplished by surreptitiously marking the animal with an odourless dye and observing whether the animal reacts in a manner consistent with it being aware that the dye is located on its own body. Such behaviour might include turning and adjusting of the body in order to better view the marking in the mirror or poking at the marking on its own body with a"
X Link 2015-08-11T18:07Z 300.7K followers, 576.4K engagements

"Artificial Intelligence News Artificial Intelligence News. Everything on AI including futuristic robots with artificial intelligence computer models of human intelligence and more"
X Link 2023-07-14T16:00Z 300.7K followers, 17.5K engagements

"Scientists reverse Alzheimers in mice and restore memory ScienceDaily Alzheimers has long been considered irreversible but new research challenges that assumption. Scientists discovered that severe drops in the brains energy supply help drive the diseaseand restoring that balance can reverse damage even in advanced cases. In mouse models treatment repaired brain pathology restored cognitive function and normalized Alzheimers biomarkers. The results offer fresh hope that recovery may be possible"
X Link 2025-12-25T12:15Z 300.7K followers, 274.5K engagements

"AI supercharges scientific output while quality slips ScienceDaily AI writing tools are supercharging scientific productivity with researchers posting up to 50% more papers after adopting them. The biggest beneficiaries are scientists who dont speak English as a first language potentially shifting global centers of research power. But theres a downside: many AI-polished papers fail to deliver real scientific value. This growing gap between slick writing and meaningful results is complicating peer review funding decisions and research oversight"
X Link 2025-12-25T12:15Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Ice age polarity reversal was global event: Extremely brief reversal of geomagnetic field climate variability and super volcano ScienceDaily Some [-----] years ago a complete and rapid reversal of the geomagnetic field occured. Magnetic studies on sediment cores from the Black Sea show that during this period during the last ice age a compass at the Black Sea would have pointed to the south instead of north. Moreover data obtained by the research team together with additional data from other studies in the North Atlantic the South Pacific and Hawaii prove that this polarity reversal was a"
X Link 2026-01-01T19:45Z 300.7K followers, 157.1K engagements

"Yellowstone wolves may not have transformed the national park after all ScienceDaily A new scientific review challenges the headline-grabbing claim that Yellowstones returning wolves triggered one of the strongest trophic cascades on Earth. Researchers found that the reported 1500% surge in willow growth was based on circular calculations and questionable comparisons. After correcting for modeling and sampling flaws the supposed ecosystem-wide boom largely disappears"
X Link 2026-02-14T01:48Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Wide-eyed fear expressions may help us -- and others -- to locate threats ScienceDaily Wide-eyed expressions that typically signal fear seem to enlarge our visual field making it easier to spot threats at the same time they enhance the ability of others to locate the source of danger according to new research"
X Link 2025-02-13T22:52Z 300.7K followers, 1.9M engagements

"Scientists found a hidden fat switch and turned it off ScienceDaily Researchers have discovered a previously unknown enzyme that plays a crucial role in fat production. By blocking it they stopped weight gain reduced liver damage and lowered harmful cholesterol levels in animal studies. The finding opens the door to a new kind of medication that could tackle obesity fatty liver disease and cardiovascular disease all at once"
X Link 2026-02-06T16:49Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements

"Orb-weaver spiders' yellow and black pattern helps them lure prey ScienceDaily Being inconspicuous might seem the best strategy for spiders to catch potential prey in their webs but many orb-web spiders which hunt in this way are brightly colored. New research finds their distinct yellow and black pattern is actually essential in luring prey"
X Link 2022-01-15T16:15Z 300.7K followers, 4.7M engagements

"This strange little dinosaur is forcing a rethink of evolution ScienceDaily A newly identified tiny dinosaur Foskeia pelendonum is shaking up long-held ideas about how plant-eating dinosaurs evolved. Though fully grown adults were remarkably small and lightweight their anatomy was anything but simplefeaturing a bizarre highly specialized skull and unexpected evolutionary traits. Detailed bone studies show these dinosaurs matured quickly with bird- or mammal-like metabolism while their teeth and posture hint at fast agile lives in dense forests"
X Link 2026-02-13T21:00Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"How Ants Find Their Way ScienceDaily Ever wondered how ants find their way straight to the uncovered food in your kitchen Now scientists have discovered how the humble wood ant navigates over proportionally huge distances using just very poor eyesight and confusing and changing natural landmarks. The research could have significant benefits in the development of autonomous robots and in furthering our understanding of basic animal learning processes"
X Link 2017-07-27T21:00Z 300.7K followers, 390.7K engagements

"Evolutionary surprise: Eight percent of human genetic material comes from a virus ScienceDaily About eight percent of human genetic material comes from a virus and not from our ancestors according to a new study. The research shows that the genomes of humans and other mammals contain DNA derived from the insertion of bornaviruses RNA viruses whose replication and transcription takes place in the nucleus"
X Link 2023-05-06T15:14Z 300.7K followers, [----] engagements

"Pinocchio effect confirmed: When you lie your nose temperature rises When a person lies he or she experiences a Pinocchio effect which is an increase in the temperature around the nose and in the orbital muscle in the inner corner of the eye. In addition when we perform a considerable mental effort our face temperature drops and when we have an anxiety attack our face temperature rises according to a pioneering study that has introduced new applications of thermography"
X Link 2012-12-03T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 4M engagements

"Sexual reproduction has another benefit: It makes humans less prone to disease over time ScienceDaily For decades theories on the genetic advantage of sexual reproduction had been put forward but none had ever been proven in humans until now. Researchers have just shown how humanity's predispositions to disease gradually decrease the more we mix our genetic material together. This discovery was finally made possible by the availability in recent years of repositories of biological samples and genetic data from different populations around the globe"
X Link 2015-02-22T21:00Z 300.7K followers, 24.8M engagements

"Is The Hippopotamus The Closest Living Relative To The Whale ScienceDaily Hippos spend lots of time in the water and now it turns out (or researchers argue) they are the closest living relative to whales. It also turns out the two are swimming in a bit of controversy"
X Link 2017-10-23T22:07Z 300.7K followers, 3.1M engagements

"Fusion reactors may create dark matter particles ScienceDaily Researchers say fusion reactors might do more than generate clean energythey could also create particles linked to dark matter. A new theoretical study shows how neutrons inside future fusion reactors could spark rare reactions that produce axions particles long suspected to exist but never observed. The work revisits an idea teased years ago on The Big Bang Theory where fictional physicists couldnt solve the puzzle. This time real scientists think theyve found a way"
X Link 2025-12-28T15:44Z 300.7K followers, 25.5K engagements

"Americas may be hit by catastrophic banana disease A researcher warned that a disease that has decimated Cavendish bananas in Africa the Middle East and Southeast Asia could be headed for the Western Hemisphere"
X Link 2015-06-11T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 492.4K engagements

"Time of day may determine the amount of fat burned by exercise ScienceDaily Physical activity at the right time of the day seems able to increase fat metabolism at least in mice. A new study shows that mice that did exercise in an early active phase which corresponds to morning exercise in humans increased their metabolism more than mice that did exercise at a time when they usually rest"
X Link 2023-04-29T21:15Z 300.7K followers, 365.2K engagements

"Research examines vicious cycle of overeating and obesity ScienceDaily New research provides evidence of the vicious cycle created when an obese individual overeats to compensate for reduced pleasure from food"
X Link 2012-11-19T03:19Z 300.7K followers, 1.6M engagements

"Mothers bear the brunt of the 'mental load' managing [--] in [--] household tasks ScienceDaily The study conducted in the US found that mothers take on seven in ten (71%) of all household mental load tasks"
X Link 2025-12-02T16:15Z 300.7K followers, 218.5K engagements

"Music aids Alzheimer's patients in remembering new information ScienceDaily Researchers have shown that patients with Alzheimer"
X Link 2020-01-09T23:30Z 300.7K followers, 4.6M engagements

"Easy Pants Zipper Pocket Tutorial: Step-by-Step Guide #versatilesewin #sewingdaily #sewinghacks"
X Link 2025-12-14T17:01Z 300.7K followers, 528.6K engagements

"Mankai duckweed plant found to offer health benefits ScienceDaily In this new study the researchers compared Mankai shake consumption to a yogurt shake equivalent in carbohydrates protein lipids and calories. Following two weeks of monitoring with glucose sensors participants who drank the duckweed shake showed a much better response in a variety of measurements including lower glucose peak levels; morning fasting glucose levels; later peak time; and faster glucose evacuation. The participants also felt more full"
X Link 2019-12-28T03:09Z 300.7K followers, 209.9K engagements

"Great Oxidation Event: More oxygen through multicellularity The appearance of free oxygen in the Earths atmosphere led to the Great Oxidation Event. This was triggered by cyanobacteria producing the oxygen which developed into multicellular forms as early as [---] billion years ago. As evolutionary biologists have shown this multicellularity was linked to the rise in oxygen and thus played a significant role for life on Earth as it is today"
X Link 2013-01-17T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 7.2M engagements

"Study provides new insight into origin of Canadian Rockies The Canadian Rocky Mountains were formed when the North American continent was dragged westward during the closure of an ocean basin off the west coast and collided with a microcontinent over [---] million years ago according to a new study"
X Link 2019-06-06T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 1.7M engagements

"How many species on Earth About [---] million new estimate says ScienceDaily About [---] million (give or take [---] million) is the new estimated total number of species on Earth -- the most precise calculation ever offered -- with [---] million species on land and [---] million in oceans. Announced by the Census of Marine Life the figure is based on a new analytical technique. The number of species on Earth had been estimated previously at [--] million to [---] million"
X Link 2016-02-06T17:39Z 300.7K followers, 1.9M engagements

"Sardine Run: Headlong race for survival of the species ScienceDaily Every year between May and July enormous shoals of the sardine Sardinops sagax give a splendid show as they migrate off the coasts of South Africa performing their Sardine Run. They are subjected to relentless attack by predators of all kinds -- sharks dolphins sea lions whales birds fishermen. Although well known to the general public this wholesale migration is still not well understood scientifically. Researchers have now examined the different hypotheses put forward to explain the event"
X Link 2022-02-08T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 150.8K engagements

"Small fish species evolved rapidly following [----] Alaska earthquake ScienceDaily Evolution can happen quickly. Consider a tiny fish species that evolved within decades -- both in its genome and external phenotypic traits -- after the [----] Alaskan earthquake"
X Link 2026-02-10T15:00Z 300.7K followers, 11.4K engagements

"Only [--] percent of American adults are metabolically healthy study finds ScienceDaily The prevalence of metabolic health in American adults is 'alarmingly low' even among people who are normal weight according to a new study. Only one in eight Americans is achieving optimal metabolic health. This carries serious implications for public health since poor metabolic health leaves people more vulnerable to developing Type [--] diabetes cardiovascular disease and other serious health issues"
X Link 2020-04-22T11:05Z 300.7K followers, 449.4K engagements

"Why did mammals survive the K/T extinction Picture a dinosaur. Huge menacing creatures they ruled the Earth for nearly [---] million years striking fear with every ground-shaking stride. Yet these great beasts were no match for a 6-mile wide meteor that struck near modern-day Mexico [--] million years ago incinerating everything in its path. This catastrophic impact -- called the Cretaceous-Tertiary or K/T extinction event -- spelled doom for the dinosaurs and many other species. Some animals however including many small mammals managed to survive"
X Link 2010-02-10T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 5.8M engagements

"Humans aren't always cut out to be creatures of the night ScienceDaily Nighttime hunters like cats and owls benefit from their big round eyes that let in plenty of light but humans have more limited abilities to see in the dark. A new article suggests that poor night vision is a common complaint that can be particularly vexing while driving"
X Link 2026-01-25T21:08Z 300.7K followers, 78K engagements

"Human and dog brains both have dedicated voice areas The first study to compare brain function between humans and any non-primate animal shows that dogs have dedicated voice areas in their brains just as people do. Dog brains like those of people are also sensitive to acoustic cues of emotion according to a new study"
X Link 2014-02-20T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 476.3K engagements

"The Introverted Girl Is Actually Mira of the Group Huntrix - Kpop Demon Hunter 🎨 Welcome to my art corner Im a freelance artist who loves bringing anime scenes to life through my own style. In this video Im recreating one of my favorite anime artworks capturing every detail color and emotion. If you enjoy my work dont forget to like comment and subscribe for more anime-inspired creations 🌸 #AnimeArt #FanArt #DrawingProcess #ArtVideo #AnimeDrawing"
X Link 2025-07-01T17:45Z 300.7K followers, 671.1K engagements

"Interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS is spraying water across the solar system ScienceDaily For millions of years a frozen wanderer drifted between the stars before slipping into our solar system as 3I/ATLASonly the third known interstellar comet ever spotted. When scientists turned NASAs Swift Observatory toward it they caught the first-ever hint of water from such an object detected through a faint ultraviolet glow of hydroxyl gas. Even more surprising the comet was blasting out water at a rate of about [--] kilograms per second while still far from the Sunmuch farther than where most comets switch on"
X Link 2026-02-11T15:06Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements

"Why Tyrannosaurus was a slow runner and why the largest are not always the fastest ScienceDaily No other animal on land is faster than a cheetah -- the elephant is indeed larger but slower. For small to medium-sized animals larger also means faster but for really large animals when it comes to speed everything goes downhill again. For the first time it is now possible to describe how this parabola-like relationship between body size and speed comes about"
X Link 2021-09-21T12:14Z 300.7K followers, 230.3K engagements

"Scientists grow carbon nanotube forest much longer than any other Carbon nanotube (CNT) forests are a solution to scaling up the production of CNTs which are becoming a staple in many industries. However even the best catalyst used to grow these forests deteriorates quickly capping possible forest length at [--] cm. Now scientists have proposed a way to ensure longer catalyst lifetime and higher growth rate creating a CNT forest that is a record seven times longer than any existing CNT array"
X Link 2020-11-04T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 2.2M engagements

"New calcium-ion battery design delivers high performance without lithium ScienceDaily Scientists at HKUST have unveiled a major leap forward in calcium-ion battery technology potentially opening the door to safer more sustainable energy storage for everything from renewable power grids to electric vehicles. By designing a novel quasi-solid-state electrolyte made from redox-active covalent organic frameworks the team solved long-standing issues that have held calcium batteries backnamely poor ion transport and limited stability"
X Link 2026-02-13T07:07Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Raising giant insects to unravel ancient oxygen The giant dragonflies of ancient Earth with wingspans of up to [--] centimeters (28 inches) are generally attributed to higher oxygen atmospheric levels in the atmosphere in the past. New experiments in raising modern insects in various oxygen-enriched atmospheres have confirmed that dragonflies grow bigger with more oxygen or hyperoxia"
X Link 2010-10-30T11:00Z 300.7K followers, 6.1M engagements

"Daily eye drops could make reading glasses obsolete ScienceDaily Eye drops combining pilocarpine and diclofenac helped patients read extra lines on vision charts with effects lasting up to two years. The treatment could revolutionize presbyopia care as a safe non-surgical alternative to glasses"
X Link 2025-09-17T22:30Z 300.7K followers, 1.6M engagements

"Magnetic fields on the moon are the remnant of an ancient core dynamo A long discussed theory about the local magnetic spots of the moon suggests that they are the result of magnetization processes caused by impacts of massive bodies on the moon surface. A new study now shows that the Moon must have had an internal core dynamo in the past"
X Link 2020-10-15T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 122.9K engagements

"Rocky planet discovered in outer orbit challenges planet formation theory ScienceDaily Astronomers have uncovered a distant planetary system that flips a long-standing rule of planet formation on its head. Around the small red dwarf star LHS [----] scientists expected to find rocky planets close in and gas giants farther out the same pattern seen in our own Solar System and hundreds of others. And at first thats exactly what they saw. But new observations revealed a surprise: the outermost planet appears to be rocky not gaseous"
X Link 2026-02-14T07:09Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Why Dont Chimpanzees Like To Barter Food Scientists examines the circumstances under which chimpanzees our closest relatives will exchange one inherently valuable commodity (an apple slice) for another (a grape) which is what early humans must have somehow learned to do. The researchers found that chimpanzees often did not spontaneously barter food items but needed to be trained to engage in commodity barter"
X Link 2008-02-05T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 15M engagements

"Lack of interest in sex successfully treated by exposure to bright light ScienceDaily Exposure to bright light increases testosterone levels and leads to greater sexual satisfaction in men with low sexual desire. These are the results of a pilot randomised placebo-controlled trial"
X Link 2025-05-04T03:45Z 300.7K followers, 78.2K engagements

"Saving cavendish: Panama disease-resistant bananas Researchers have developed and grown modified Cavendish bananas resistant to the devastating soil-borne fungus Fusarium wilt tropical race [--] (TR4) also known as Panama disease"
X Link 2017-11-15T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 492.4K engagements

"Bipolar disorder: New method predicts who will respond to lithium therapy For roughly one-third of people diagnosed with bipolar disorder lithium is a miracle drug effectively treating both their mania and depression. Now a new develop tool has been developed to gauge success of preferred treatment for bipolar disorder"
X Link 2017-03-20T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 307.7K engagements

"A tiny light trap could unlock million qubit quantum computers ScienceDaily A new light-based breakthrough could help quantum computers finally scale up. Stanford researchers created miniature optical cavities that efficiently collect light from individual atoms allowing many qubits to be read at once. The team has already demonstrated working arrays with dozens and even hundreds of cavities. The approach could eventually support massive quantum networks with millions of qubits"
X Link 2026-02-02T15:49Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"One of worlds oldest sun dial dug up in Kings Valley Upper Egypt During archaeological excavations in the Kings Valley in Upper Egypt a team of researchers from the University of Basel found one of the worlds oldest ancient Egyptian sun dials. The team of the Egyptological Seminar under the direction of Prof. Susanne Bickel made the significant discovery while clearing the entrance to one of the tombs"
X Link 2013-03-14T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 199.7K engagements

"Live Oral Bacteria Found In Arterial Plaque ScienceDaily Gum disease has been linked to hardening of the arteries for nearly a decade and scientists have long fingered a gang of oral bacteria as the obvious suspects behind many cases of the vessel-clogging killer. Now University of Florida researchers have cornered the bacterial ringleaders of gum disease inside human artery-clogging plaque — the first concrete evidence to place the pathogens at the heart of the circulatory crime scene"
X Link 2022-11-19T11:00Z 300.7K followers, 15.1M engagements

"Why The Flu Virus Is More Infectious In Cold Winter Temperatures A new finding may account for why the flu virus is more infectious in cold winter temperatures than during the warmer months. At winter temperatures the viruss outer covering or envelope hardens to a rubbery gel that could shield the virus as it passes from person to person the researchers have found. At warmer temperatures however the protective gel melts to a liquid phase. But this liquid phase apparently isnt tough enough to protect the virus against the elements and so the virus loses its ability to spread from person to"
X Link 2008-04-01T11:00Z 300.7K followers, 6.6M engagements

"Childhood lead exposure linked to poor adult mental health ScienceDaily Lead exposure in childhood appears to have long-lasting negative effects on mental health and personality in adulthood according to a study of people who grew up in the era of leaded gasoline. The findings reveal that the higher a person's blood lead levels at age [--] the more likely they are to show signs of mental illness and difficult personality traits by age 38"
X Link 2026-01-26T19:27Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Slow down: Reduced speed limits save lives in busy cities ScienceDaily Traffic accidents are the leading cause of non-natural deaths worldwide. Lower speed limits may help prevent accidents. But speed-reduction policies can be controversial and effects are not well documented. A new study shows that speed reductions in So Paulo Brazil dramatically reduced fatal accidents and increased travel times only minimally"
X Link 2026-01-29T19:18Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"A quiet change in everyday foods could save thousands of lives ScienceDaily Lowering salt in everyday foods could quietly save lives. Researchers found that modest sodium reductions in bread packaged foods and takeout meals could significantly reduce heart disease and stroke rates in France and the U.K. The key advantage is that people would not need to alter their eating habits at all. Small changes to the food supply could deliver large long-term health benefits"
X Link 2026-01-31T16:39Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"DNA marks in adults tracked back to changes in earliest days of life ScienceDaily Scientists have gained a glimpse of how marks on our genes that could be linked to adverse health outcomes in later life behave differently in the first few days after conception according to new research"
X Link 2018-07-15T10:32Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Marine darkwaves: Hidden ocean blackouts are putting sealife at risk ScienceDaily Scientists have identified a newly recognized threat lurking beneath the oceans surface: sudden episodes of underwater darkness that can last days or even months. Caused by storms sediment runoff algae blooms and murky water these marine darkwaves dramatically reduce light reaching the seafloor putting kelp forests seagrass and other light-dependent life at risk"
X Link 2026-01-21T21:00Z 300.7K followers, 41.1K engagements

"Mix up plant species to keep soil healthy ScienceDaily Across the globe soils are under threat. Due changing land use to feed a growing population climate change and contamination of land with toxic chemicals this precious resource is deteriorating posing a serious threat to our future food security. When it comes to keeping our soil healthy maintaining plant species diversity is key according to new research"
X Link 2016-08-12T11:29Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"For chimpanzees salt and pepper hair not a marker of old age ScienceDaily Silver strands and graying hair is a sign of aging in humans but things aren't so simple for our closest ape relatives --the chimpanzee. A new study found graying hair is not indicative of a chimpanzee's age"
X Link 2025-01-01T04:43Z 300.7K followers, [----] engagements

"The overlooked survival strategy that made us human ScienceDaily Long before humans became master hunters our ancestors were already thriving by making the most of what nature left behind. New research suggests that scavenging animal carcasses wasnt a desperate last resort but a smart reliable survival strategy that shaped human evolution. Carrion provided calorie-rich food with far less effort than hunting especially during hard times and humans were uniquely suited to take advantage of itfrom strong stomach acid and long-distance walking to fire tools and teamwork"
X Link 2026-01-23T17:16Z 300.7K followers, [----] engagements

"Europas ice may be feeding a hidden ocean that could support life ScienceDaily Europas subsurface ocean might be getting fed after all. Scientists found that salty nutrient-rich surface ice can become heavy enough to break free and sink through Europas icy shell delivering essential ingredients to the ocean below. The process is fast repeatable and works under many conditions. It offers a promising new explanation for how Europa could support life"
X Link 2026-01-23T11:40Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements

"Fossil ankles indicate Earth's earliest primates lived in trees ScienceDaily Earth's earliest primates have taken a step up in the world now that researchers have gotten a good look at their ankles. A new study has found that Purgatorius a small mammal that lived on a diet of fruit and insects was a tree dweller. Paleontologists made the discovery by analyzing 65-million-year-old ankle bones collected from sites in northeastern Montana"
X Link 2015-01-20T12:36Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Intelligence is more accurate predictor of future career success than socioeconomic background study suggests ScienceDaily When intelligence and socioeconomic background are pitted directly against one another intelligence is a more accurate predictor of future career success researchers have found"
X Link 2026-01-28T23:06Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"How studded winter tires may damage public health as well as pavement ScienceDaily Scientists are reporting new evidence on how studded tires -- wintertime fixtures in some areas but banned in others for causing damage to pavement -- may also damage the health of motorists and people living near highways. Studded tires have small metal protrusions from the rubber tread that improve traction on icy or snow-covered roads"
X Link 2019-12-16T15:42Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Puffy baby planets reveal a missing stage of planet formation ScienceDaily A young star called V1298 Tau is giving astronomers a front-row seat to the birth of the galaxys most common planets. Four massive but extremely low-density worlds orbiting the star appear to be inflated precursors of super-Earths and sub-Neptunes. By watching how the planets subtly tug on one another scientists measured their masses and confirmed they are far puffier than expected. The system reveals how these planets dramatically shrink and transform as they age"
X Link 2026-01-31T15:42Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Giant recently extinct seabird also inhabited Japan ScienceDaily Fossils discovered in Japan show that an extinct seabird called the spectacled cormorant that was originally thought to be restricted to Bering Island also resided in Japan nearly [------] years ago; indicating that the bird was a relict"
X Link 2018-07-16T08:10Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Three million years ago our ancestors were vegetarian ScienceDaily New research reveals that our early ancestors the Australopithecus lived almost entirely on plants and likely didnt eat meat at all. By analyzing the nitrogen isotopes in their fossilized tooth enamel scientists discovered a consistent herbivore-like dietary signaturemarking a significant insight into human evolution. This challenges long-standing theories that meat consumption was a driving force in early brain development"
X Link 2025-02-11T09:29Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Scientists find hidden pathways pancreatic cancer uses to spread ScienceDaily Researchers have discovered how pancreatic cancer reprograms its surroundings to spread quickly and stealthily. By using a protein called periostin the tumor remodels nearby tissue and invades nerves which helps cancer cells travel and form metastases. This process also creates a tough fibrous barrier that makes treatments less effective. Targeting periostin could help stop this invasion before it starts"
X Link 2026-01-30T16:12Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Missing link found between brain immune system; major disease implications ScienceDaily In a stunning discovery that overturns decades of textbook teaching researchers have determined that the brain is directly connected to the immune system by vessels previously thought not to exist. The discovery could have profound implications for diseases from autism to Alzheimer's to multiple sclerosis"
X Link 2015-06-02T16:42Z 300.7K followers, 277.6K engagements

"Scientists trace fertilizer microplastics from fields to beaches ScienceDaily Plastic-coated fertilizers used on farms are emerging as a major but hidden source of ocean microplastics. A new study found that only a tiny fraction reaches beaches through rivers while direct drainage from fields to the sea sends far more plastic back onto shore. Once there waves and tides briefly trap the particles on beaches before many vanish again. This helps explain why so much plastic pollution seems to disappear after reaching the ocean"
X Link 2026-01-28T11:43Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Rare damaging inherited mutations work together to reduce lifespan ScienceDaily Scientists report that the combined effects of rare damaging mutations present at birth have a negative impact on healthspan and longevity"
X Link 2020-04-10T17:44Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Ancient oceans stayed oxygen rich despite extreme warming ScienceDaily Scientists studying ancient ocean fossils found that the Arabian Sea was better oxygenated [--] million years ago even though the planet was warmer than today. Oxygen levels only plunged millions of years later after the climate cooled defying expectations. Powerful monsoons and ocean circulation appear to have delayed oxygen loss in this region compared to the Pacific. The discovery suggests future ocean oxygen levels may not follow a simple warming-equals-deoxygenation rule"
X Link 2026-01-30T00:36Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Optimistic thinking linked with lower cognitive abilities ScienceDaily Optimistic thinking has long been immortalized in self-help books as the key to happiness good health and longevity but it can also lead to poor decision making with particularly serious implications for people's financial wellbeing"
X Link 2025-07-24T00:22Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"AI that can shoot down fighter planes helps treat bipolar disorder ScienceDaily The artificial intelligence that can blow human pilots out of the sky in air-to-air combat accurately predicted treatment outcomes for bipolar disorder according to a new medical study. The findings open a world of possibility for using AI or machine learning to treat disease researchers said"
X Link 2017-07-07T06:59Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"A simple blood test could spot Parkinsons years before symptoms ScienceDaily Scientists in Sweden and Norway have uncovered a promising way to spot Parkinsons disease yearspossibly decadesbefore its most damaging symptoms appear. By detecting subtle biological signals in the blood tied to how cells handle stress and repair DNA the team identified a brief early window when Parkinsons quietly leaves a measurable fingerprint"
X Link 2026-01-29T14:31Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Surprise role for dopamine in social interplay ScienceDaily The chemical signal dopamine plays an unexpected role in social interactions new research shows. In mice nerve cells in the brain that release dopamine became particularly active in animals kept on their own for a short time"
X Link 2020-03-14T17:22Z 300.7K followers, 24.3K engagements

"Three Out Of Four American Women Have Disordered Eating Survey Suggests ScienceDaily Sixty-five percent of American women between the ages of [--] and [--] report having disordered eating behaviors according to the results of an online survey. An additional [--] percent of women report symptoms consistent with eating disorders such as anorexia bulimia nervosa and binge eating disorder meaning that a total of [--] percent of American women surveyed endorse some unhealthy thoughts feelings or behaviors related to food or their bodies"
X Link 2022-04-19T14:27Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"RNA for the first time recovered from an extinct species ScienceDaily A new study shows the isolation and sequencing of more than a century-old RNA molecules from a Tasmanian tiger specimen preserved at room temperature in a museum collection. This resulted in the reconstruction of skin and skeletal muscle transcriptomes from an extinct species for the first time. The researchers note that their findings have relevant implications for international efforts to resurrect extinct species including both the Tasmanian tiger and the woolly mammoth as well as for studying pandemic RNA viruses"
X Link 2026-01-13T18:21Z 300.7K followers, [----] engagements

"A 20-year-old cancer vaccine may hold the key to long-term survival ScienceDaily Two decades after a breast cancer vaccine trial every participant is still alivean astonishing result for metastatic disease. Scientists found their immune systems retained long-lasting memory cells primed to recognize cancer. By enhancing a key immune signal called CD27 researchers dramatically improved tumor elimination in lab studies. The findings suggest cancer vaccines may have been missing a crucial ingredient all along"
X Link 2026-01-30T06:58Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Like venom coursing through the body: Researchers identify mechanism driving COVID-19 mortality ScienceDaily Researchers have identified what may be the key molecular mechanism responsible for COVID-19 mortality -- an enzyme related to neurotoxins found in rattlesnake venom"
X Link 2025-03-21T11:19Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Metallurgy likely has more than one birthplace ScienceDaily When and where did humans invent metal smelting Scientists have found the answer to this long-debated question in the history of technology. Metallurgy does not have a single origin but probably arose at various locations at about the same time. The experts reached this conclusion after re-examining the 8500-year-old copper slag and analysing the chemical composition of other copper artefacts from the Stone Age settlement of atalhyk in the Near East"
X Link 2026-01-18T22:11Z 300.7K followers, [----] engagements

"Your brain does something surprising when you dont sleep ScienceDaily When youre short on sleep and your focus suddenly drifts your brain may be briefly slipping into cleanup mode. Scientists discovered that these attention lapses coincide with waves of fluid washing through the brain a process that usually happens during sleep. Its the brains way of compensating for missed rest. Unfortunately that internal cleaning comes at the cost of momentary mental shutdowns"
X Link 2026-01-28T08:00Z 300.7K followers, [----] engagements

"Satellites spot rapid Doomsday Glacier collapse ScienceDaily Two decades of satellite and GPS data show the Thwaites Eastern Ice Shelf slowly losing its grip on a crucial stabilizing point as fractures multiply and ice speeds up. Scientists warn this pattern could spread to other vulnerable Antarctic shelves"
X Link 2025-12-11T20:56Z 300.7K followers, [----] engagements

"CTE risk severity increases with years playing American football ScienceDaily The risk and severity of developing chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) increases with the number of years playing American football according to a new study. These findings reaffirm the relationship between playing tackle football and CTE and for the first time quantify the strength of that relationship"
X Link 2020-08-14T23:35Z 300.7K followers, 238.1K engagements

"3.2 million km/h galaxy smash-up A massive collision of galaxies sparked by one travelling at a scarcely-believable [--] million mph (3.2 million km/h) has been seen in unprecedented detail by one of Earths most powerful telescopes. The dramatic impact was observed in Stephans Quintet a nearby galaxy group made up of five galaxies first sighted almost [---] years ago. It sparked an immensely powerful shock akin to a sonic boom from a jet fighter -- the likes of which are among the most striking phenomena in the Universe"
X Link 2024-11-22T12:00Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements

"Cloves are best natural antioxidant Spanish study finds Using spices eaten in the Mediterranean diet as natural antioxidants is a good way forward for the food industry given the beneficial health effects of these products. This has been shown by researchers in Spain who have put the clove in first place"
X Link 2010-03-19T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 1.5M engagements

"Where does all Earths gold come from Precious metals the result of meteorite bombardment rock analysis finds Ultra high precision analyses of some of the oldest rock samples on Earth provides clear evidence that the planets accessible reserves of precious metals are the result of a bombardment of meteorites more than [---] million years after Earth was formed"
X Link 2011-09-09T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 401.8K engagements

"Why do sunbathers live longer than those who avoid the sun New research looks into the paradox that women who sunbathe are likely to live longer than those who avoid the sun even though sunbathers are at an increased risk of developing skin cancer. An analysis of information on [-----] Swedish women who were followed for [--] years revealed that longer life expectancy among women with active sun exposure habits was related to a decrease in heart disease and noncancer/nonheart disease deaths causing the relative contribution of death due to cancer to increase. Whether the positive effect of sun"
X Link 2016-03-21T12:00Z 300.7K followers, [----] engagements

"1.5-million-year-old fossil face is forcing a rethink of human origins ScienceDaily Scientists have digitally reconstructed the face of a 1.5-million-year-old Homo erectus fossil from Ethiopia uncovering an unexpectedly primitive appearance. While its braincase fits with classic Homo erectus the face and teeth resemble much older human ancestors. This discovery challenges long-held ideas about where and how Homo erectus evolved. It also hints at a complex web of migrations and possible mixing between early human species"
X Link 2026-01-03T21:58Z 300.7K followers, 32.9K engagements

"Pinpointing genes that protect against frailty ScienceDaily Frailty is a common condition associated with old age characterized by weight loss weakness decreased activity level and reduced mobility which together increase the risk of injury and death. Yet not all elderly people become frail; some remain vigorous and robust well into old-age. The question remains: why"
X Link 2014-08-12T09:42Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Pesticide linked to chronic kidney disease ScienceDaily A commonly available pesticide has been associated with an increased risk of chronic kidney disease (CKD)"
X Link 2022-10-29T00:29Z 300.7K followers, 35.2K engagements

"Scientists just overturned a 100-year-old rule of chemistry and the results are impossible ScienceDaily Chemists at UCLA are showing that some of organic chemistrys most famous rules arent as unbreakable as once thought. By creating bizarre cage-shaped molecules with warped double bondsstructures long considered impossiblethe team is opening the door to entirely new kinds of chemistry"
X Link 2026-01-25T00:21Z 300.7K followers, 14.7K engagements

"Freezing blueberries improves antioxidant availability ScienceDaily Freezing blueberries may actually make them even healthier. A study from South Dakota State University found that ice crystals formed during freezing boost the release of anthocyaninsthe antioxidants responsible for the berries deep blue color and powerful health effects. These compounds help protect the body from cell damage and disease making blueberries one of the most beneficial fruits you can eat"
X Link 2026-01-29T19:56Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements

"Novel nanoantibiotics kill bacteria without harming healthy cells ScienceDaily The CDC estimates more than [---] million Americans experience antibiotic-resistant infections each year. To address this critical issue researchers recently investigated whether a series of novel nanoparticles can kill some pathogens that lead to infection without affecting healthy cells"
X Link 2022-01-23T08:27Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Brain Difference In Psychopaths Identified ScienceDaily Scientists have found differences in the brain which may provide a biological explanation for psychopathy"
X Link 2021-10-13T11:19Z 300.7K followers, 1.9M engagements

"Biohybrid hand gestures with human muscles ScienceDaily A biohybrid hand which can move objects and do a scissor gesture has been created. The researchers used thin strings of lab-grown muscle tissue bundled into sushilike rolls to give the fingers enough strength to contract. These multiple muscle tissue actuators (MuMuTAs) created by the researchers are a major development towards building larger biohybrid limbs. While currently limited to the lab environment MuMuTAs have the potential to advance future biohybrid prosthetics aid drug testing on muscle tissue and broaden the potential of"
X Link 2025-02-19T20:24Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"A breakthrough that turns exhaust CO2 into useful materials ScienceDaily Scientists have created a device that captures carbon dioxide and transforms it into a useful chemical in a single step. The new electrode works with realistic exhaust gases rather than requiring purified CO2. It converts the captured gas into formic acid which is used in energy and manufacturing. The system even functions at CO2 levels found in normal air"
X Link 2026-01-30T01:53Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"This CRISPR breakthrough turns genes on without cutting DNA ScienceDaily A new CRISPR breakthrough shows scientists can turn genes back on without cutting DNA by removing chemical tags that act like molecular anchors. The work confirms these tags actively silence genes settling a long-running scientific debate. This gentler form of gene editing could offer a safer way to treat Sickle Cell disease by reactivating a fetal blood gene. Researchers say it opens the door to powerful therapies with fewer unintended side effects"
X Link 2026-01-05T12:16Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements

"Preshistoric plumage patterns ScienceDaily An undergraduate paleontology student has discovered an Ornithomimus dinosaur with preserved tail feathers and soft tissue. The discovery is shedding light on the convergent evolution of these dinosaurs with ostriches and emus relating to thermoregulation and is also tightening the linkages between dinosaurs and modern birds"
X Link 2018-06-27T21:12Z 300.7K followers, 618.6K engagements

"Vitamin D may not be the great solution to health problems ScienceDaily A new review examines the evidence for [--] common beliefs about vitamin D. The beliefs range from the ability of vitamin D to reduce falls and fractures improve depression and mental well-being prevent rheumatoid arthritis treat Multiple Sclerosis and lessen incidences of cancer and mortality. The review finds little evidence though that supplementation with this vitamin has much of an effect at all"
X Link 2016-11-05T06:43Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Are Tigers 'Brainier' Than Lions ScienceDaily A wide-ranging study of big cat skulls has shown that tigers have bigger brains relative to their body size than lions leopards or jaguars"
X Link 2025-10-26T16:04Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements

"Researchers debunk myth of 'right-brained' and 'left-brained' personality traits ScienceDaily Neuroscientists now assert that there is no evidence within brain imaging that indicates some people are right-brained or left-brained. For years in popular culture the terms left-brained and right-brained have come to refer to personality types with an assumption that some people use the right side of their brain more while some use the left side more. Researchers have debunked that myth through identifying specific networks in the left and right brain that process lateralized functions"
X Link 2013-08-15T15:14Z 300.7K followers, 143.9K engagements

"The Brain Loses Neurons During Adolescence Researchers have found that adolescence is a time of remodeling in the prefrontal cortex a brain structure dedicated to higher functions such as planning and social behaviors. The study of rats found that both males and females lose neurons with females losing about [--] percent more neurons in certain brain regions than males"
X Link 2007-03-19T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 749.5K engagements

"Scientists finally explain statin muscle pain ScienceDaily Statins are a cornerstone of heart health but muscle pain and weakness cause many patients to quit taking them. Scientists have now identified the precise molecular trigger behind these side effects. They found that statins jam open a critical muscle protein causing a toxic calcium leak. The discovery could lead to safer statins that keep their life-saving benefits without the muscle damage"
X Link 2026-01-31T15:42Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Eating meat may protect against cancer landmark research shows ScienceDaily A large study of nearly [-----] adults found no link between eating animal protein and higher death risk. Surprisingly higher animal protein intake was associated with lower cancer mortality supporting its role in a balanced health-promoting diet"
X Link 2025-08-26T01:40Z 300.7K followers, 30.5K engagements

"Gray wolves are hunting sea otters and no one knows how ScienceDaily On a remote Alaskan island gray wolves are rewriting the rulebook by hunting sea otters a behavior few scientists ever expected to see. Researchers are now uncovering how these coastal wolves adapted to marine hunting what it means for landsea ecosystems and whether this ancient predatorprey relationship is re-emerging as sea otters recover"
X Link 2026-01-31T09:49Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Fish out of water: How killifish embryos adapted their development ScienceDaily The annual killifish lives in regions with extreme drought. A research group now reports that the early embryogenesis of killifish diverges from that of other species. Unlike other fish their body structure is not predetermined from the outset. This could enable the species to survive dry periods unscathed"
X Link 2026-01-27T21:00Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"How many Earth-like planets are around sun-like stars A new study provides the most accurate estimate of the frequency that planets that are similar to Earth in size and in distance from their host star occur around stars similar to our Sun"
X Link 2019-08-14T12:00Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Hearing and touch have common genetic basis: Gene mutation leads to impairment of two senses ScienceDaily New research shows that hearing and touch have a common genetic basis. In patients with Usher syndrome a hereditary form of deafness accompanied by impaired vision researchers have discovered a gene mutation that is also causative for the patients' impaired touch sensitivity"
X Link 2021-10-31T09:16Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"How blue and green clays kill bacteria ScienceDaily Since prehistoric times clays have been used by people for medicinal purposes. Whether by eating it soaking in a mud bath or using it to stop bleeding from wounds clay has long been part of keeping humans healthy. Now scientists have discovered the two key ingredients that give some natural clays the power to kill even antibiotic-resistant microbes"
X Link 2024-10-28T16:50Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements

"Significant ongoing decline in sperm counts of Western men ScienceDaily A rigorous and comprehensive meta-analysis of data collected between [----] and [----] finds that among men from Western countries sperm concentration declined by more than [--] percent with no evidence of a 'leveling off' in recent years. These findings strongly suggest a significant decline in male reproductive health that has serious implications beyond fertility and reproduction given recent evidence linking poor semen quality with higher risk of hospitalization and death"
X Link 2025-04-15T15:08Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Energy demands limit our brains' information processing capacity ScienceDaily Our brains have an upper limit on how much they can process at once due to a constant but limited energy supply according to a new study using a brain imaging method that measures cellular metabolism"
X Link 2021-12-07T14:26Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Scientists find hidden rainfall pattern that could reshape farming ScienceDaily New research shows that crops are far more vulnerable when too much rainfall originates from land rather than the ocean. Land-sourced moisture leads to weaker less reliable rainfall heightening drought risk. The U.S. Midwest and East Africa are particularly exposed due to soil drying and deforestation. Protecting forests and improving land management could help stabilize rainfall and crop yields"
X Link 2026-01-29T17:01Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Reading information aloud to yourself improves memory of materials ScienceDaily You are more likely to remember something if you read it out loud a study has found"
X Link 2024-10-24T13:01Z 300.7K followers, 115.7K engagements

"This spiders pearl necklace was living parasites ScienceDaily What looked like a pearl necklace on a tiny spider turned out to be parasitic mite larvae. Scientists identified the mites as a new species marking the first record of its family in Brazil. The larvae attach to juvenile spiders and feed on lymph through a weak spot in the spiders body. The discovery came from long-stored specimens suggesting many more species remain hidden in collections"
X Link 2026-01-28T07:46Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"A once-in-a-generation discovery is transforming dairy farming ScienceDaily A Michigan dairy farm took a gamble on a new kind of soybeanand it paid off fast. After feeding high-oleic soybeans to their cows milk quality improved within days and feed costs dropped dramatically. Backed by years of MSU research the crop is helping farmers replace expensive supplements with something they can grow themselves. Demand has surged and many believe it could reshape the dairy industry"
X Link 2026-01-19T11:58Z 300.7K followers, [----] engagements

"Did human hunting activities alone drive great auks' extinction ScienceDaily New insight on the extinction history of a flightless seabird that vanished from the shores of the North Atlantic during the 19th century has been published today"
X Link 2019-11-26T20:08Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Scientists found a survival switch inside brain cells ScienceDaily Findings could create new opportunities to treat and study neurodegenerative diseasesScientists discovered that sugar metabolism plays a surprising role in whether injured neurons collapse or cling to life. By activating internal protective programs certain metabolic changes can temporarily slow neurodegenerationhinting at new ways to help the brain defend itself"
X Link 2026-01-27T22:49Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"New visual technique could advance early detection of neurodegenerative diseases ScienceDaily Researchers developed a new visual diagnostic technique that can be used to advance early detection for neurodegenerative diseases like Parkinson's disease and similar diseases that affect animals including Chronic Wasting Disease in deer"
X Link 2025-08-21T10:30Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements

"More teens than ever aren't getting enough sleep ScienceDaily Researchers found that about [--] percent of adolescents in [----] slept less than [--] hours a night which is [--] percent more than in [----] and [--] percent more than in [----]. They further learned that the more time young people reported spending online the less sleep they got. Teens who spent [--] hours a day online were [--] percent more likely to not sleep enough than their peers who only spent an hour online each day"
X Link 2017-10-28T15:06Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Earthquakes can systematically trigger other ones on opposite side of Earth ScienceDaily New research shows that a big earthquake can not only cause other quakes but large ones and on the opposite side of the Earth"
X Link 2018-05-04T09:49Z 300.7K followers, 150.7K engagements

"Can you teach koalas new tricks ScienceDaily Researchers have found that koalas are more clever than they thought them to be in a world-first study that tracked the Australian animal more comprehensively than ever before in suburban Brisbane"
X Link 2023-07-21T17:07Z 300.7K followers, 1.9M engagements

"Parents rank their obese children as 'very healthy' ScienceDaily Parents of obese children often do not recognize the potentially serious health consequences of childhood weight gain or the importance of daily physical activity in helping their child reach a healthy weight a study shows. "Parents have a hard time changing their child's dietary and physical activity behaviors" said the study's lead author. "Our study tells us what factors may be associated with a parent's motivation to help their child become more healthy.""
X Link 2014-07-24T13:48Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"New state of quantum matter could power future space tech ScienceDaily A UC Irvine team uncovered a never-before-seen quantum phase formed when electrons and holes pair up and spin in unison creating a glowing liquid-like state of matter. By blasting a custom-made material with enormous magnetic fields the researchers triggered this exotic transformationone that could enable radiation-proof self-charging computers ideal for deep-space travel"
X Link 2025-12-07T13:00Z 300.7K followers, [----] engagements

"Creating smarter surgical robots ScienceDaily Providing surgical robots with a new kind of machine intelligence that significantly extends their capabilities and makes them much easier and more intuitive for surgeons to operate is the goal of a major new grant"
X Link 2013-10-26T05:28Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Birds and dinosaurs: High-performance breathing in bones ScienceDaily Dinosaurs are far from 'extinct' but dominate as birds still most regions of the globe. Part of this huge success is due to the evolution of air sacs which are crucial for the high efficiency of their respiratory system. Scientists have analyzed the structure of bones that are in contact with air sacs and found both in extinct and extant species a hitherto unknown type of bony tissue"
X Link 2018-06-27T21:12Z 300.7K followers, 618.6K engagements

"Red and processed meat consumption associated with higher type [--] diabetes risk study of two million people finds ScienceDaily Meat consumption particularly consumption of processed meat and unprocessed red meat is associated with a higher type [--] diabetes risk an analysis of data from [----] million participants"
X Link 2026-01-28T21:12Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Stars like the Sun dont just stop shining but this one did ScienceDaily A distant Sun-like star suddenly went dark for months stunning astronomers who quickly realized something massive was passing in front of it. Observations revealed a gigantic disk of gas and dust filled with vaporized metals swirling around an unseen companion object. For the first time scientists directly measured the motion of these metallic winds inside such a disk. The findings suggest that even ancient star systems can still experience catastrophic planetary smashups"
X Link 2026-01-27T09:46Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Scientists say dimming the sun could spark global chaos ScienceDaily Scientists are taking the once-radical concept of dimming the sun through stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI) seriously but a Columbia University team warns that reality is far messier than models suggest. Their study reveals how physical geopolitical and economic constraints could derail even the best-intentioned attempts to cool the planet. From unpredictable monsoon disruptions to material shortages and optical inefficiencies every step introduces new risks"
X Link 2025-10-25T13:35Z 300.7K followers, [----] engagements

"Olympic broadcasting inequality: Olympics commentary differs based on gender race and nationality ScienceDaily Studies show Olympic Games' commentary differs based on gender race and nationality. Athletes who are white male and/or American receive more favorable coverage than females non-Americans and minorities"
X Link 2016-08-08T10:00Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"High exposure to glyphosate in pregnancy could cause lower birth weights in babies ScienceDaily Researchers are learning more about the effects of herbicide exposure during pregnancy"
X Link 2022-10-29T00:29Z 300.7K followers, 35.2K engagements

"Detection of an Earth-sized exoplanet orbiting the ultracool dwarf star SPECULOOS-3 ScienceDaily Astronomers have just discovered a new Earth-sized exoplanet around SPECULOOS-3 an 'ultracool dwarf' star as small as Jupiter twice as cold as our Sun and located [--] light-years from Earth. After the famous TRAPPIST-1 SPECULOOS [--] is the second planetary system discovered around this type of star"
X Link 2025-02-25T15:08Z 300.7K followers, 159K engagements

"New study challenges social medias mental health impact A new study has challenged the perception heavy social media use has a significant impact on mental health finding little to no relationship between the two. In fact not only does the research indicate the amount of time spent on social media has a negligible effect on mental health indicators such as depression anxiety and stress -- the result isnt always negative either"
X Link 2024-11-06T12:00Z 300.7K followers, [----] engagements

"A sudden signal flare reveals the hidden partner behind fast radio bursts ScienceDaily A repeating fast radio burst has just given up one of its biggest secrets. Long-term observations revealed a rare signal flare caused by plasma likely ejected from a nearby companion star. This shows the burst source isnt alone but part of a binary system. The finding strengthens the case that magnetars interacting with stellar companions can generate repeating cosmic flashes"
X Link 2026-01-28T06:49Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Northwestern Medicines new antibody wakes the immune system against pancreatic cancer ScienceDaily Pancreatic cancer uses a sugar-coated disguise to evade the immune system helping explain why its so hard to treat. Northwestern scientists discovered this hidden mechanism and created an antibody that strips away the tumors protective signal. In animal tests immune cells sprang back into action and tumors grew much more slowly. The team is now refining the therapy for future human trials"
X Link 2026-01-29T16:45Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Men From Early Middle Ages Were Nearly As Tall As Modern People Northern European men living during the early Middle Ages were nearly as tall as their modern-day American descendants a finding that defies conventional wisdom about progress in living standards during the last millennium"
X Link 2004-09-02T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 260.3K engagements

"Dermatologists say collagen supplements arent the skin fix people expect ScienceDaily Collagen pills sound like a shortcut to younger skin but solid evidence doesnt back them up. Higher-quality studies show little benefit and your body doesnt absorb collagen in the way ads suggest. Some supplements may even pose safety concerns and lack proper testing. Experts recommend focusing on proven habits like sunscreen retinoids and a nutrient-rich diet instead"
X Link 2026-01-30T23:54Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Astronomers just watched a black hole twist spacetime ScienceDaily Astronomers have detected spacetime itself being dragged and twisted by a spinning black hole for the first time. The discovery seen during a stars violent destruction confirms a prediction made over [---] years ago and reveals new clues about how black holes spin and launch jets"
X Link 2025-12-21T08:10Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements

"Cancer patients who got a COVID vaccine lived much longer ScienceDaily A groundbreaking study reveals that cancer patients who received a COVID-19 mRNA vaccine within [---] days of starting immunotherapy lived dramatically longer than those who didn’t. Researchers from the University of Florida and MD Anderson Cancer Center discovered that the vaccine’s immune-activating properties may boost cancer-fighting responses acting like a nonspecific “flare” that reawakens the immune system"
X Link 2025-10-19T21:48Z 300.7K followers, 213.9K engagements

"Silk fibers improve bioink for 3D-printed artificial tissues and organs ScienceDaily Researchers processed silk fibers into a versatile component of bioink for 3D cell printing technology. Printed objects retain their shape better than those produced without the silk additive and the cells are not further damaged. This development will help advance regenerative medicine and drug discovery and potentially reinvigorate the silk industry"
X Link 2020-10-09T20:10Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Repeated febrile convulsions linked to epilepsy and psychiatric disorders ScienceDaily The risk of febrile convulsions increases with the child's fever and children who suffer from repeated febrile convulsions during their first year of life have an increased risk of developing epilepsy and psychiatric disorders later in life. This is shown by a comprehensive register-based study. In the study almost [-----] Danish children who have been suffering from febrile convulsions have been followed for more than [--] years"
X Link 2019-12-04T02:29Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Artificial Sweeteners Linked To Weight Gain ScienceDaily Want to lose weight It might help to pour that diet soda down the drain. Researchers have laboratory evidence that the widespread use of no-calorie sweeteners may actually make it harder for people to control their intake and body weight. Cutting the connection between sweets and calories may confuse the body making it harder to regulate intake"
X Link 2026-01-31T14:57Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Study finds popular 'growth mindset' educational interventions aren't very effective ScienceDaily A new study found that 'growth mindset interventions' or programs that teach students they can improve their intelligence with effort -- and therefore improve grades and test scores -- don't work for students in most circumstances"
X Link 2018-06-03T10:41Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements

"How dinosaurs may have evolved into birds ScienceDaily A possible genetic mechanism underlying the evolution of birds has been discovered by scientists. Studies of dinosaur fossils that show bird-like traits such as feathers light bones air sacs and three-digit forelimbs clarified evolutionary kinship of birds and dinosaurs. However identifying genomic DNA changes during this evolutionary transition has remained a challenge"
X Link 2018-06-27T21:12Z 300.7K followers, 618.6K engagements

"Scientists may have been wrong about what causes asthma ScienceDaily Asthma may not be driven by the molecules scientists have blamed for decades. Researchers have identified pseudo leukotrienes inflammation-triggering compounds formed by uncontrolled free-radical reactions rather than normal enzymes. These molecules were found at much higher levels in people with asthma closely tracking how severe their symptoms were. The finding hints at a new way to treat asthma by preventing the inflammatory spark instead of blocking its aftermath"
X Link 2026-01-27T14:57Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Brief diversions vastly improve focus researchers find ScienceDaily A University of Illinois experiment shows that waning focus isn’t caused by a drained “attention tank” at all—it’s the brain getting bored. When volunteers tackled a mind-numbing computer task for nearly an hour their accuracy nosedived—unless they were interrupted twice by a tiny unrelated number-matching diversion. Those micro-breaks kept performance rock-steady hinting that the mind like the senses tunes out anything unchanging. Jolt it with a quick change and concentration springs back"
X Link 2022-01-15T16:59Z 300.7K followers, 681.4K engagements

"Ancient microbes responsible for breathing life into ocean 'deserts' ScienceDaily Billions of years ago Earth differed greatly from our modern environment -- the ancient atmosphere contained almost no oxygen. The life-supporting atmosphere we currently enjoy did not develop overnight. On the most basic level biological activity in the ocean shaped the oxygen concentrations in the atmosphere. New research shows that "oxygen oases" in the surface ocean were sites of significant oxygen production long before the breathing gas began to accumulate in the atmosphere"
X Link 2012-11-05T23:37Z 300.7K followers, 2.1M engagements

"A Trojan horse cancer therapy shows stunning results ScienceDaily Scientists at Mount Sinai have unveiled a bold new way to fight metastatic cancer by turning the tumors own defenses against it. Instead of attacking cancer cells head-on the experimental immunotherapy targets macrophagesimmune cells that tumors hijack to shield themselves from attack. By eliminating or reprogramming these bodyguards the treatment cracks open the tumors protective barrier and allows the immune system to flood in and destroy the cancer"
X Link 2026-01-30T06:58Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Vaccine-resistant polio strain discovered ScienceDaily The global initiative to eradicate poliomyelitis through routine vaccination has helped reduce the number of cases by more than 99% in [--] years. However major epidemics are still occurring today. Researchers have identified the virus responsible for deadly and recent outbreaks and have sequenced its genetic material. The genetic sequence shows two mutations unknown until now of the proteins that form the "shell" (capsid) of the virus. On the face of it this evolution complicates the task for the antibodies produced by the immune system of"
X Link 2014-11-05T12:46Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Does caregiving cause psychological stress It depends says study of female twins ScienceDaily A newly published study shows that the associations between caregiving and different types of psychological distress (depression anxiety perceived stress and perceived mental health) depend largely on a person's genes and upbringing -- and less so on the difficulty of caregiving"
X Link 2014-02-07T21:34Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Scientists Use Bacterial Toxin To Kill Brain Tumors ScienceDaily Researchers at The Hospital for Sick Children (HSC) and the University of Toronto (U of T) have used a toxin produced by the same bacteria that cause hamburger disease to completely eliminate malignant human brain tumors grown in mice. The research is published in the June issue of the scientific journal Oncology Research"
X Link 2025-05-28T17:15Z 300.7K followers, [----] engagements

"This fish-inspired filter removes over 99% of microplastics ScienceDaily Washing machines release massive amounts of microplastics into the environment mostly from worn clothing fibers. Researchers at the University of Bonn have developed a new fish-inspired filter that removes over 99% of these particles without clogging. The design mimics the funnel-shaped gill system used by filter-feeding fish allowing fibers to roll away instead of blocking the filter. The low-cost patent-pending solution could soon be built directly into future washing machines"
X Link 2026-01-27T21:00Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements

"Nanoparticles from tattoos travel inside the body scientists find ScienceDaily The elements that make up the ink in tattoos travel inside the body in micro and nanoparticle forms and reach the lymph nodes according to a new study. It is the first time that there is analytical evidence of the transport of various organic inorganic pigments and toxic element impurities as well as in depth characterization of the pigments ex vivo in tattooed tissues"
X Link 2022-06-11T13:31Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements

"Twinning is winning: Moms of twins live longer study finds ScienceDaily Compared with other mothers women who deliver twins live longer have more children than expected bear babies at shorter intervals over a longer time and are older at their last birth according to a new study. The findings do not mean having twins is healthy for women but instead that healthier women have an increased chance of delivering twins researchers say"
X Link 2017-07-13T16:00Z 300.7K followers, 2M engagements

"Solar chip monitors windows ScienceDaily A new kind of radio chip is intended to warn when windows are left open. This way you can avoid having the heat go out the window on cold days. The sensor also detects break-in attempts early on. The key: This maintenance-free chip powers up with energy supplied by solar power"
X Link 2015-01-29T21:16Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Ancient soils reveal clues to early life on Earth ScienceDaily Oxygen appeared in the atmosphere up to [---] million years earlier than we previously thought according to new research raising new questions about the evolution of early life"
X Link 2018-04-12T18:36Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Earliest-known arboreal and subterranean ancestral mammals discovered ScienceDaily The fossils of two interrelated ancestral mammals newly discovered in China suggest that the wide-ranging ecological diversity of modern mammals had a precedent more than [---] million years ago"
X Link 2015-02-23T10:00Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Sneezing sponges suggest existence of sensory organ: Discovery challenges assumptions about 'primitive' organism ScienceDaily Biologists have used a variety of drugs to elicit sneezes in freshwater sponges and observed the process using fluorescent dye. Their efforts focused on the sponge's osculum which controls water exiting the organism including water expelled during a sneeze"
X Link 2014-02-07T14:38Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Scientists finally explain Earths strangest fossils ScienceDaily The Ediacara Biota are some of the strangest fossils ever foundsoft-bodied organisms preserved in remarkable detail where preservation shouldnt be possible. Scientists now think their survival in sandstone came from unusual ancient seawater chemistry that created clay cements around their bodies after burial. This process captured delicate shapes that would normally vanish. The finding helps clarify how complex life emerged before the Cambrian Explosion"
X Link 2026-01-29T05:30Z 300.7K followers, [----] engagements

"What cannabis really does for chronic pain ScienceDaily Cannabis products with higher THC levels may slightly reduce chronic pain particularly nerve pain according to a review of multiple clinical trials. The improvement was small and short-lived while side effects were more common. Products with little or no THC including CBD-only formulations showed no clear benefit. Researchers say more long-term studies are needed"
X Link 2026-01-31T17:14Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Back from the dead: Extinct fish rediscovered in a remote Bolivian pond after [--] years ScienceDaily A tiny fish long feared lost has resurfaced in Bolivia offering a rare conservation success story amid widespread habitat destruction. Moema claudiae a seasonal killifish unseen for more than [--] years was rediscovered in a small temporary pond hidden within a fragment of forest surrounded by farmland. The find allowed scientists to photograph the species alive for the first time and uncover new details about its behavior and ecology"
X Link 2026-01-27T21:00Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Scientists found the brain rhythm that makes your body feel like yours ScienceDaily A new study reveals that alpha brain waves help the brain decide what belongs to your body. Faster rhythms allow the brain to match sight and touch more precisely strengthening the feeling that a body part is truly yours. Slower rhythms blur that timing making it harder to separate self from surroundings. The findings could improve prosthetic design and immersive virtual experiences"
X Link 2026-01-14T13:49Z 300.7K followers, [----] engagements

"James Webb catches an exoplanet losing its atmosphere in real time ScienceDaily Astronomers have captured the most dramatic view yet of a planet losing its atmosphere watching the ultra-hot gas giant WASP-121b for an entire orbit with the James Webb Space Telescope. Instead of a single stream of escaping gas the planet is wrapped in two colossal helium tailsone trailing behind like a comet the other stretching ahead toward its star"
X Link 2026-01-20T13:02Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements

"CRISPR uncovers gene that supercharges vitamin D—and stops tumors in their tracks ScienceDaily A gene called SDR42E1 has been identified as a key player in how our bodies absorb and process vitamin D. Researchers found that disabling this gene in colorectal cancer cells not only crippled their survival but also disrupted thousands of other genes tied to cancer and metabolism. This opens the door to highly targeted cancer therapies—by either cutting off vitamin D supply to tumors or enhancing the gene’s activity to boost health. The findings hint at vast possibilities in"
X Link 2025-07-19T21:29Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements

"This AI spots dangerous blood cells doctors often miss ScienceDaily A generative AI system can now analyze blood cells with greater accuracy and confidence than human experts detecting subtle signs of diseases like leukemia. It not only spots rare abnormalities but also recognizes its own uncertainty making it a powerful support tool for clinicians"
X Link 2026-01-13T14:13Z 300.7K followers, [---] engagements

"Expecting to teach enhances learning recall ScienceDaily People learn better and recall more when given the impression that they will soon have to teach newly acquired material to someone else suggests new research. Findings of the study suggest that simply telling learners that they would later teach another student changes their mindset enough so that they engage in more effective approaches to learning than did their peers who simply expected a test"
X Link 2026-01-21T08:15Z 300.7K followers, 61.8K engagements

"New study model with clues to anti-aging ScienceDaily Scientists have created genetically-engineered mice that could help accelerate anti-aging research"
X Link 2025-09-25T11:01Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"NASAs Perseverance rover completes the first AI-planned drive on Mars ScienceDaily NASAs Perseverance rover has just made history by driving across Mars using routes planned by artificial intelligence instead of human operators. A vision-capable AI analyzed the same images and terrain data normally used by rover planners identified hazards like rocks and sand ripples and charted a safe path across the Martian surface. After extensive testing in a virtual replica of the rover Perseverance successfully followed the AI-generated routes traveling hundreds of feet autonomously"
X Link 2026-02-03T02:00Z 300.7K followers, [--] engagements

"Earths atmosphere came from outer space scientists find The gases which formed the Earths atmosphere -- and probably its oceans -- did not come from inside the Earth but from outer space according to a new study"
X Link 2009-12-11T12:00Z 300.7K followers, 199.2K engagements

"Baby knows best: Baby-led weaning promotes healthy food preferences ScienceDaily A new study has shown that babies who are weaned using solid finger food are more likely to develop healthier food preferences and are less likely to become overweight as children than those who are spoon-fed pureed food"
X Link 2022-09-06T14:07Z 300.7K followers, 358.8K engagements

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