A new study recently suggested that up to 30 percent of humans are fooled by the faces they see around, yet artificial intelligence or AI is getting it right all the time.
New research recently suggested that the role of Fragile X mental retardation protein or FMRP is more sophisticated compared to what was previously known. Essentially, looking at memory neurons in the mouse brain's hippocampus region, Rockefeller researchers discovered that the FMRP protein has two different tasks.
Some outbreaks of the Ebola virus in Africa have been associated with persistent infection in patients who had survived past outbreaks, senior author of a recently published paper Xiankun "Kevin" Zeng said.
The new research published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B used fresh and strong phylogenetic approaches to validate Utaurora comosa as just the second opabiniid ever found and the first in more than a hundred years.
A research team from Michigan Medicine recently analyzed private insurance claims from over 9,000 adult individuals with traumatic spinal cord injury and over one million without the condition.
Space reports recently said Bill Gray, an asteroid hunter has been keeping tabs on a rocket since its 2015 launch and this month he realized his orbit-tracking software predicted the 4-tonne booster will cash into the surface of Moon on March 4.
Electronics company LG has recently rolled out the world's first-ever hotel service robot which it claims has a semi-autonomous operation has the capacity to carry a maximum of 66 pounds of products.
In a new study, a team of researchers discovered that methane in the atmosphere had raced beyond 1,900 parts a billion, which is thrice the levels discovered before the industrial revolution.
A report said that white-tailed deer in Staten Island have tested positive for the new COVID-19 strain, contributing to the growing body of studies that show "widespread virus spillover from humans to deer populations."
Last week, adolescent turtles washed up on a beach located in Kalba, in which shriveled balloons and plastic foam are being cited as among the culprit for the demise of the creatures as they are reported to be the last things turtles ate.
Researchers recently reported that three men who were paralyzed in motorcycle accidents and lost control or sensation over their legs were able to take supported steps within one day of turning on the electrical stimulation and could wander outside using a walker a few months after.
In a recent study, older adults suffering from mild cognitive impairment or dementia were able to enhance their memory through the use of a personal assistant application on their smartphones to get reminded about upcoming activities and events.
Recent research from Massachusetts General Hospital showed vaccination for women during pregnancy led to more lasting levels of antibodies in infants, when compared to infants born to unvaccinated mothers infected with COVID-19.
A team of researchers at Kyoto University's Yukawa Institute for Theoretical Physics has now suggested a novel method to a problem by defining energy to integrate the idea of entropy.
New research of a 1.5 million-year-old vertebra, the earliest hominins may have expanded outside Africa in numerous waves, each following diverse environments and equipped for different ways of life.
The Department of Homeland Security officials recently tested 100-pound, four-legged headless robot dogs in Virginia and Texas, to eventually help secure the US-Mexico border.
Researchers recently reported that rising temperatures brought by climate change could lead to prolonged blackouts in the United States during peak times. According to a new study, such an occurrence will drive a rise in the number of residences and businesses that run air conditioning through the summer in the country.
A new medical study recently showed how gut microorganisms or microbes can affect an individual's health, specifically resulting in certain conditions like obesity, for one.
A new study led by the University of Washington researchers recently showed that common species of mosquitoes, following the detection of telltale gas humans breathe out, are flying towards specific colors.
Polishing records of anatomical descriptions, vocal accounts, and sound recordings, Cornell University ecologist Aaron Rice and colleagues were able to identify physiological features that enable Actinopterygii or ray-finned groups of fishes to make noises minus their vocal cords.
Sheba Medical Center at Tel Hashomer recently announced a hospital in Israel will begin to carry out an eye examination through the Tear Film Imager or TFI, to detect coronavirus infection.
For the first time, satellite imagery from Planet Labs not just shows activity around a mysterious hangar, although the nature of that particular activity is a never-before-seen unusual delta-wing aircraft that's parked on its northern apron.
Interactive artificial intelligence or AI mixologist named Cecilia is the world's first-ever interactive robot bartender who's currently infiltrating the North Miami-based Florida International University's Chaplin and School of Hospitality & Tourism Management.
After testing various methods "to make masks seal" better and more effectively around the face, researchers discovered that a pair of hosiery can do the trick best of providing protection against COVID-19 and other viral infections.
A new study recently focused on the half-dozen sub-regions of the surface layer of the brain, also called the cerebral cortex, as they are known to regulate how people are moving their mouth, lips, and tongue to form words and to play a role in processing what they hear they, themselves are saying.
A new study recently showed identical twins sharing almost the same genes were found to have a more similar love of nature compared to fraternal twins sharing half their genes.
A new study specified that people in this South American nation's Chincha valley "threaded the spines of the dead onto wooden rounds" about 500 years ago, a practice only recently recorded in the field of archeology.
Chinese electronics handyman and influencer Handy Geng recently posted a video on YouTube as shown below, where he detailed the process of developing a massive power bank reported to be "the world's largest."
In their study published in Biosensors and Bioelectronics, the researchers specified that "in-solution nanosensors," also called "Nano2," serve to identify disease antigens in a specimen by simple mixing.