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Daily briefing: Why it’s hard to show insight under pressure
Robots run this laboratory in Japan — and are changing how scientists work
Hard-to-detect mutations explain how common autoimmune diseases arise
Should there be a national museum of chemicals?
Bottom-Up Synthesis of Molecular Nanodiamond from Nanographene
When the grid can’t keep up: how South African laboratories handle power outages
Why AI can’t be trusted to write scientific reviews
Innovation starts in schools — lessons from China
Too dangerous to release: is Mythos the start of the restricted-AI era?
Iran’s Internet blackout: a scholar’s month in the dark
A cautious voice on the closure of China’s journal ranking list
Conservation gains should not be at the mercy of political changes
Poland’s economy is thriving, but its science is dying
Author Correction: In vitro characterization of the human segmentation clock
USC scientists discover a hidden Alzheimer’s trigger and a possible way to shut it down
USC researchers have identified potential new drug compounds that may reduce the brain inflammation linked to Alzheimer’s disease, especially in people with the high-risk APOE4 gene. The compounds target cPLA2, an enzyme that seems to fuel harmful inflammation while also being important for normal brain activity.
Outdoor lights may be making mosquito season longer
Artificial light at night delays winter “shutdown” of mosquitoes carrying disease
Eating more beans and soy could slash high blood pressure risk by nearly 30%
Eating more beans, lentils, chickpeas, tofu, and other soy foods could be a surprisingly powerful way to fight high blood pressure. A major analysis of studies from around the world found that people with the highest intake of legumes were 16% less likely to develop hypertension, while those eating the most soy foods had a 19% lower risk.
Can fast, nimble clinical trials deliver a drug for the new Ebola outbreak?
Past outbreaks spawned clever strategies for testing antivirals and antibodies, but researchers will still face major challenges on the ground
Scientists discover why Ozempic and Wegovy weight loss eventually plateaus
New NIH research reveals that semaglutide sparks different responses inside appetite-controlling brain cells, offering fresh insight into why GLP-1 weight-loss drugs don’t work the same for everyone. Scientists also found a possible way to extend the drugs’ effects, potentially helping patients push past weight-loss plateaus.
Common heart drug taken by millions found useless — and possibly dangerous
A massive international study could upend 40 years of heart attack treatment. Researchers found that beta blockers—routinely prescribed after uncomplicated heart attacks—offered no real benefit for patients whose heart function remained normal, despite being given to millions worldwide. Even more surprising, women taking the drugs faced a higher risk of death, repeat heart attack, or hospitalization for heart failure compared to women who didn’t receive them.