News

With the use of autonomous recording units, or ARUs, scientists can listen to bird frequencies to understand their behaviors.
Some sleuths fear that the business of cleaning up flawed studies is being weaponized against science itself. For years, ...
During his Ph.D. research, mathematician Tyron Lardy worked on a new approach to hypothesis testing. Instead of the traditional p-value, he uses so-called e-values. These turn out to be more ...
Emerging ‘co-scientist’ systems use teams of chatbots to mimic the deliberations of a research group. Do they really help?
Why do some rivers split? UCSB scientists found the answer—and it could change how we restore and manage waterways.
An unforeseen feature in proton-proton collisions previously observed by the CMS experiment at CERN's Large Hadron Collider ...
AI is becoming a go-to tool for PPC. But a test shows a 20% error rate across platforms. Advertisers need to vet their advice ...
The leaders who thrive aren’t those who have the answers—they’re the ones who know how to ask better questions.
A group of scientists studying pregnancy across six different mammals—from humans to marsupials—uncovered how certain cells ...
A new study finds there are 27 million metric tons of invisible plastic particles in the North Atlantic alone.
This study explores how expectations influence comfort food consumption, revealing insights into the psychological factors ...