Aggregator
Blood test hints at breast-tumour response to treatment
Continuously graded-doped SnO<sub>2</sub> for efficient n–i–p perovskite solar cells
To defeat gerrymandering, we must go back to the drawing board
Science, Volume 392, Issue 6797, April 2026.
Deeper detection limits in astronomical imaging using self-supervised spatiotemporal denoising
Science, Volume 392, Issue 6797, April 2026.
Bypassing the yellow phase for extremely stable formamidinium lead iodide perovskite solar cells
Science, Volume 392, Issue 6797, April 2026.
Toward life with a 19–amino acid alphabet through generative artificial intelligence design
Science, Volume 392, Issue 6797, April 2026.
Gene syntax defines supercoiling-mediated transcriptional feedback
Science, Volume 392, Issue 6797, April 2026.
Rumen ciliates modulate methane emissions in ruminants
Science, Volume 392, Issue 6797, April 2026.
Disordered protein LAT encodes relative levels of signaling pathways in T cell activation
Science, Volume 392, Issue 6797, April 2026.
Lymphoid tissue chemokines limit priming duration to preserve CD8+ T cell functionality
Science, Volume 392, Issue 6797, April 2026.
Saving sharks and rays, one catch at a time — in photos
How sewing can set you up for failure and success in science
Scientists to return to Fukushima — this time to study disaster recovery
Why preprint servers are increasing moderation — and what that means for researchers
Genome pioneer Craig Venter dies: here’s how he transformed science
Long-lived immune cells show promise against cancer in world-first trial
‘Make Pluto a planet again’? NASA chief revives debate that divides astronomers
Wild-meat consumption estimated across Central Africa
An electrifying test to find a good coffee
This AI knew the answers but didn’t understand the questions
For decades, psychologists have debated whether the human mind can be explained by one unified theory or must be broken into separate parts like memory and attention. A recent AI model called Centaur seemed to offer a breakthrough, claiming it could mimic human thinking across 160 different cognitive tasks. But new research is challenging that bold claim, suggesting the model isn’t truly “thinking” at all—it’s just memorizing patterns.