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New Research Finds

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New Research Finds — page 2

Cartoon digital illustration of a bone cross-section with glowing stem cells and a highlighted Piezo1 sensor lighting up in response to motion waves, symbolizing how movement triggers bone growth.
New Research Finds

Why Your Bones Could Benefit from Exercise Without Moving: The Hidden Exercise Sensor in Bone Marrow

Cartoon digital illustration of a grocery aisle with packaged foods, a scientist reviewing charts, and highlighted preservative labels to show varying cancer risks.
New Research Finds

Most Food Preservatives Aren’t Linked to Cancer—Until A Few Are: The Big French Study That Rewrites the Narrative

Cartoon-style digital illustration of a mouse brain with an enlarged view of a Toxoplasma cyst displaying several distinct bradyzoite subtypes, inspired by findings from single-cell RNA sequencing.
New Research Finds

Why the Brain Parasite Isn’t Dormant: Each Toxoplasma Cyst Contains at Least Five Subtypes That Could Reactivate

Cartoon digital illustration of a fruit-fly neuron glowing with sugar-energy signals, featuring symbolic DLK and SARM1 pathways that represent the brain’s metabolic switch.
New Research Finds

Why the Brain-Health Trend Might Be Missing a Key Switch: Sugar Metabolism Could Determine Neuron Survival

semiconductor-chip-with-electron-and-nuclear-spin-qubits
New Research Finds

Quantum Tech Reaches Its Transistor Moment—but Scaling It to Real-World Machines Will Take Patience

Cartoon digital illustration of an inflamed airway showing traditional leukotrienes and chaotic pseudo-leukotrienes forming through free-radical oxidation, with a small lab scene symbolizing scientific discovery.
New Research Finds

Asthma Isn’t Caused by Leukotrienes After All — Meet the Pseudo-Leukotrienes

NASA’s Crawler-Transporter moving the SLS rocket and Orion spacecraft from the Vehicle Assembly Building to Launch Pad 39B for Artemis II.
New Research Finds

Why Artemis II Around the Moon Is NASA's Real Moon Mission — And the One That Matters Most

Artist’s illustration of a debris disk and gas cloud orbiting a companion object and blocking light from a Sun-like star, with internal gas motion revealed by astronomical observations.
New Research Finds

Why a Sun-Like Star Going Dark for Nine Months Proves Planetary Collisions Persist in Mature Star Systems

Cartoon digital illustration of a paralyzed patient wearing an EEG cap as brain signals control limb movement without invasive implants.
New Research Finds

Paralysis Breakthrough: Brain Waves Could Move Limbs Again—And It Won’t Require Invasive Implants

Cartoon digital illustration of an iron lattice under a magnetic field, with aligned spins slowing carbon diffusion inside steel during heat treatment.
New Research Finds

Why the Magnetic Secret Inside Steel Could Slash Steelmaking Energy

Cartoon illustration of a human body with obesity and high blood pressure icons connected to a glowing brain through stressed blood vessels, representing the causal pathway to dementia.
New Research Finds

Why Obesity and High Blood Pressure Are Direct Causes of Dementia — A Genetic Twist That Rewrites Prevention

Digital illustration of aging macrophages with a glowing feedback loop representing GDF3 self-signaling through the SMAD2/3 pathway that sustains age-related inflammation.
New Research Finds

Why Age-Related Inflammation Might Be Fueled by a Hidden Immune Loop—and Why That Could Change Everything

Digital illustration of cancer evolution showing a lattice of glowing single cells with chromosomal tiles shifting across a multidimensional grid, representing ALFA-K predicting future tumor changes.
New Research Finds

Cancer Evolution Isn’t Chaos: The Hidden Rules That Predict Tumor Change

Protochips Fusion heating stage and chip inside the Nion electrical module, allowing researchers to run precise high-temperature experiments in the microscope’s vacuum environment. Credit: Jani Kotakoski
New Research Finds

Two-Dimensional Melting Has a Secret In-Between State—Science Catches the Hexatic Phase On Camera

active-genes-in-colon-tissue
New Research Finds

The Hidden Immune Chain: TL1A, ILC3, and Neutrophils Tipping the Scales in IBD-Driven Colorectal Cancer

Digital illustration of a tungsten carbide catalyst inside a glowing reactor, breaking plastic polymers into cleaner molecules and converting CO2 into fuels, highlighting beta-W2C catalytic efficiency.
New Research Finds

Why the #CircularEconomy Trend Just Met Its Match: Tungsten Carbide Converts Plastic Waste 10x More Efficiently Than Platinum

Digital illustration of a human brain with glowing inner-speech waves overlapping incoming sound signals, highlighting a corollary-discharge glitch where thoughts are mistaken for external voices.
New Research Finds

Why the brain glitch misreading inner speech explains hearing voices — and how that challenges old schizophrenia myths

Digital illustration of MYC depicted as a dual-function molecule inside a pancreatic tumor, showing its growth-driving role and its RNA-binding immune-suppressing cloak, with immune cells beginning to reactivate.
New Research Finds

Two-Faced MYC Could Uncloak Pancreatic Cancer for Immunotherapy

Cartoon digital illustration of a super-Eddington quasar with a swirling accretion disk, bright X-ray corona, and powerful radio jet against a star-filled early universe backdrop.
New Research Finds

Why a Black Hole Growing 13x the Eddington Limit Could Rewrite How the Early Universe Built Giants

Digital illustration showing human family silhouettes connected by genealogical lines alongside beavers and prairie voles, representing cross-species comparisons of monogamy based on sibling ratios.
New Research Finds

Humans in the Monogamy Premier League: Beavers, Meerkats, and a Surprising Twist

Digital illustration of microplastics in the upper ocean with plankton and microbes forming biofilms on plastic fragments, showing how this interaction weakens the ocean’s carbon sink.
New Research Finds

Why Microplastics Are Undermining the Ocean's Carbon Sink

Fossil specimen of the Thrinaxodon skull and jaw used for the study
New Research Finds

Why a 250-million-year-old fossil rewrites the origin of mammal hearing

Digital illustration of nasal tissue releasing interferon waves to defend against approaching rhinoviruses, representing how early innate immunity affects cold severity.
New Research Finds

Why the Body’s First Line of Defense, Not the Rhinovirus, Determines How Bad Your Cold Gets

Digital illustration of a mitochondrion restoring energy as a CS2 decoy molecule blocks alpha-synuclein from binding to ClpP, representing a new Parkinson’s therapy approach.
New Research Finds

Why This Parkinson’s Breakthrough Targeting the Cell’s Energy Engine Could Upend Symptom Care

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