Around the world, children’s cooperative behaviors and norms converge toward community-specific norms in middle childhood, Boston College researchers report
2026-02-06
Chestnut Hill, Mass. (2/6/2026) – Children across the globe engage in a constellation of behaviors that support cooperation, an action critical to the survival of the human species, a team of Boston College researchers report today in the journal Science Advances.
The team from Associate Professor of Psychology Katherine McAuliffe’s Cooperation Lab surveyed children in the urban United States, rural Uganda, Canada, and Peru, and the hunter-horticulturalist indigenous Shuar of Ecuador.
The researchers found there are cross-cultural regularities in some aspects of the development ...
How cultural norms shape childhood development
2026-02-06
How do children learn to cooperate with others? A new cross-cultural study suggests that the answer depends less on universal rules and more on the social norms surrounding the child.
In the study, researchers examined how more than 400 children ages five to 13 from the United States, Canada, Peru, Uganda and the Shuar communities of Ecuador behaved in situations involving fairness, trust, forgiveness and honesty. The team also surveyed children and adults in each community to understand what people believed was the “right” thing to do.
The ...
University of Phoenix research finds AI-integrated coursework strengthens student learning and career skills
2026-02-06
University of Phoenix announces the publication of “Bridging the AI skills gap: A blueprint for future‑proofing the workforce by including industry advisory councils for undergraduate environmental science program course redesign” in Industry and Higher Education. The article is authored by Jacquelyn Kelly, Ph.D., associate dean, College of General Studies; Dianna Gielstra, Ph.D., full-time faculty, Environmental Science Program, College of General Studies; Tomáš J. Oberding, Ph.D., full-time faculty, Environmental Science Program, College of General Studies, College of General Studies; Jim Bruno, MBA, associate dean, College of Business and ...
Next generation genetics technology developed to counter the rise of antibiotic resistance
2026-02-06
Antibiotic resistance (AR) has steadily accelerated in recent years to become a global health crisis. As deadly bacteria evolve new ways to elude drug treatments for a variety of illnesses, a growing number of “superbugs” have emerged, ramping up estimates of more than 10 million worldwide deaths per year by 2050.
Scientists are looking to recently developed technologies to address the pressing threat of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, which are known to flourish in hospital settings, sewage treatment areas, animal husbandry locations ...
Ochsner Health hospitals named Best-in-State 2026
2026-02-06
NEW ORLEANS – Five Ochsner Health owned and affiliated hospitals have been named among Newsweek’s America’s Best-in-State Hospitals 2026. This honor is presented by Newsweek and Statista Inc., a leading statistics portal and industry ranking provider.
Ochsner Health’s dedication to top-quality patient care
“When our hospitals are recognized among the best in state, it is due to the dedication of our teams and the excellent care they provide. These individuals consistently put patients first through each step of the care journey. They live out Ochsner’s commitment ...
A new window into hemodialysis: How optical sensors could make treatment safer
2026-02-06
For the millions of people living with end‑stage kidney disease, hemodialysis is more than a medical procedure, it is a thrice‑weekly lifeline that keeps the body’s chemistry in balance. Yet even with decades of clinical experience and numerous technological advances, one stubborn challenge persists: determining how much fluid to remove during treatment without tipping a patient into dangerous instability. Too little fluid removal leaves patients overloaded, too much can trigger sudden drops in blood ...
High-dose therapy had lasting benefits for infants with stroke before or soon after birth
2026-02-06
Research Highlights:
For infants and toddlers who have had a stroke, a new treatment that restricted the use of their stronger arm and hand to encourage them to use their stroke-affected arm and hand, combined with high-dosage and a specific type of goal-directed therapy, led to immediate improvement in function and more skills gained.
The findings are based on 167 stroke survivors younger than 3 years old with marked impairment in using one arm. They were enrolled in the trial and randomly assigned to one of ...
‘Energy efficiency’ key to mountain birds adapting to changing environmental conditions
2026-02-06
Research led by the University of East Anglia (UEA) sheds new light on how mountain birds adapt to changes in climate.
Scientists know that species diversity changes as you go up a mountain, but it is not clearly understood why this is the case.
One theory is that it is mostly because of long-term evolution, and the climate niches species have adapted to over millions of years. Another - the ‘energy efficiency’ hypothesis - suggests it is about how species today manage their energy budgets and compete for available resources that vary in space ...
Scientists now know why ovarian cancer spreads so rapidly in the abdomen
2026-02-06
Ovarian cancer kills more women than any other gynecological cancer. Most patients receive their diagnosis only after the disease spreads throughout the abdomen. Until now, scientists have never fully understood why this cancer advances so fast.
A new study led by Nagoya University explains why. Published in Science Advances, the study shows that cancer cells recruit help from protective mesothelial cells that normally line the abdominal cavity. Mesothelial cells lead the invasion and cancer cells follow the pathways they ...
USF Health launches nation’s first fully integrated institute for voice, hearing and swallowing care and research
2026-02-06
TAMPA, Fla. (Feb. 6, 2026) — The University of South Florida yesterday celebrated the grand opening of the new USF Health Institute for Voice and Hearing Innovation, a first-of-its-kind center that combines clinical research and comprehensive patient care for voice, hearing and swallowing disorders.
The new institute establishes USF as the first in the nation to bring together multidisciplinary patient care and clinical research for disorders of communication and swallowing in a single, fully ...
Why rethinking wellness could help students and teachers thrive
2026-02-06
Teachers supervising students in school-sponsored work sites tend to prioritize emotional and social well-being in the workplace, according to research from Rutgers Health.
The study, published in Occupational Health, examined how educators approach student wellness and the factors they prioritize when preparing students to enter the workforce.
Led by Maryanne Campbell, assistant director of the New Jersey Safe Schools Program at the Rutgers School of Public Health, researchers evaluated a pilot activity based ...
Seabirds ingest large quantities of pollutants, some of which have been banned for decades
2026-02-06
In her 1962 book, Silent Spring, American biologist Rachel Carson revealed that DDT, a widely used pesticide at the time, was responsible for the mass death of birds, including the iconic bald eagle.
One reason was that the pesticide made eggshells thinner, causing mothers to break them when sitting on them to incubate. Silent Spring is considered the founding work of the modern environmental movement.
Most rich countries had banned DDT by the 1970s. In Brazil, the agricultural ban did not take effect until 1985; however, the poison was still permitted for controlling disease vectors, such as Aedes aegypti. In 2009, a law prohibiting ...
When Earth’s magnetic field took its time flipping
2026-02-06
Earth’s magnetic field is generated by the churn of its liquid nickel-iron outer core, but it is not a constant feature.
Every so often, the magnetic north and south poles swap places in what are called geomagnetic reversals, and the record of these flips is preserved in rocks and sediments, including those from the ocean floor. These reversals don’t happen suddenly, but over several thousand years, where the magnetic field fades and wobbles while the two poles wander and finally settle in the opposite positions of the globe.
Over the past 170 million years, the magnetic poles have reversed 540 times, with the reversal ...
Americans prefer to screen for cervical cancer in-clinic vs. at home
2026-02-06
More than 60% of American women prefer to get their cervical cancer screening in a clinic versus at home with a self-sampling kit, study finds
Black women are less likely to prefer at-home cervical cancer screening
In May, the FDA approved the first home-based self-sampling device for cervical cancer screening
HOUSTON, FEBRUARY 6, 2026 – American women now have the option of screening for cervical cancer at home, using newly approved self-collection tools. While experts hope this will increase uptake in the under-screened population, a first-of-its kind study by researchers from The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center found the majority (60.8%) still prefer ...
Rice lab to help develop bioprinted kidneys as part of ARPA-H PRINT program award
2026-02-06
HOUSTON – (Feb. 6, 2026) – Rice University bioengineer Antonios Mikos is part of a team of researchers led by the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine awarded up to $24.8 million over five years to help address the nation’s growing organ donor shortage by bioprinting on-demand kidney tissues.
The new funding, from the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA-H), will enable the team to produce bioprinted, vascularized kidney tissue that augments renal function in patients suffering from kidney ...
Researchers discover ABCA1 protein’s role in releasing molecular brakes on solid tumor immunotherapy
2026-02-06
In recent years, cancer researchers have made major breakthroughs by using the body’s immune system to fight cancer. One of the most promising approaches, known as immune checkpoint blockade, works by releasing molecular “brakes” on T cells. This allows them to better recognize and attack cancer cells. While these therapies can be very effective for some patients, many solid tumors, including most forms of breast cancer, remain largely unaffected. Cancer Center at Illinois (CCIL) Program Co-leader Erik Nelson and his research group are working to understand why these treatments ...
Scientists debunk claim that trees in the Dolomites anticipated a solar eclipse
2026-02-06
Around 14 hours before a partial solar eclipse passed over the Dolomites in Northern Italy, a group of spruce trees showed a sudden, synchronized increase in electrical activity. A widely publicized paper by Chiolerio et al. claimed that the trees were anticipating and preparing for the impending solar eclipse. In an opinion paper publishing February 6 in the Cell Press journal Trends in Plant Science, researchers debunked this claim by examining the evidence and offering a simpler explanation: a local thunderstorm coincided with the trees’ increased electrical activity, during which a cluster of lightning strikes struck near the study site.
“To ...
Impact of the 2010 World Health Organization Code on global physician migration
2026-02-06
Boston, MA— A new study led by the Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute evaluates the impact of a voluntary code intended to improve ethical recruitment of physicians from World Health Organization-designated shortage countries. While the Code initially reduced physician migration from these countries, the research finds it did not improve their physician supply, highlighting the need for broader investments to strengthen global health systems.
The study is published on February 6 in JAMA Health Forum.
Global health care workforce shortages are intensified when physicians from lower-to-middle income countries (LMICs) migrate to high-income ...
Measuring time at the quantum level
2026-02-06
“The concept of time has troubled philosophers and physicists for thousands of years, and the advent of quantum mechanics has not simplified the problem,” says Professor Hugo Dil, a physicist at EPFL. “The central problem is the general role of time in quantum mechanics, and especially the timescale associated with a quantum transition.”
Quantum events, like tunnelling, or an electron changing its state by absorbing a photon, happen at mind‑bending speeds. Some take only a few tens of attoseconds (10-18 seconds), ...
Researchers find a way to 3D print one of industry’s hardest engineering materials
2026-02-06
Tungsten carbide–cobalt (WC–Co) is prized for its hardness, but that same property makes it unusually difficult to shape. The current process is wasteful and expensive for the yield produced, and an economically sensible method for creating these materials is long overdue.
WC-Co cemented carbides are important in fields that require high wear resistance and hardness, such as cutting and construction tools. Currently, these carbides are made using powder metallurgy, utilizing high pressure and sintering machines to combine the WC and Co powders to yield a manufactured cemented carbide. Though this method does produce highly durable and hard final products, a lot of expensive ...
Coupling dynamic effect based on the molecular sieve regulation of Fe nanoparticles
2026-02-06
Iron-based molecular sieves show great promise for high-temperature NH3-SCR due to their intrinsic shape selectivity and thermal stability. However, excessive ammonia oxidation at high temperatures limits NOx conversion and long-term stability, and its kinetic transition remains poorly understood. A team led by Zhiqiang Sun, Hanzi Liu, and Xinlin Xie has developed a high-temperature Fe@ZSM-5 catalyst and established a coupled kinetic model to describe ammonia oxidation behavior at high temperatures. Their work is published in the journal Industrial Chemistry & Materials on December 2025.
The authors synthesized HZSM-5 zeolites via ...
Engineering the “golden bridge”: Efficient tunnel junction design for next-generation all-perovskite tandem solar cells
2026-02-06
WUHAN, CHINA — A research team from the Wuhan National Laboratory for Optoelectronics (WNLO) and the School of Optical and Electronic Information at Huazhong University of Science and Technology (HUST) has reported a new advancement in all-perovskite tandem solar cells. By utilizing quantitative Silvaco TCAD simulations, the team has elucidated the fundamental physics of the tunnel junction, providing a definitive design rule to overcome efficiency bottlenecks in all-perovskite tandem solar cells.
The Bottleneck: Unbalanced Charge Tunneling
All-perovskite tandem solar cells are a high-potential technology ...
Understanding how cancer cells use water pressure to move through the body
2026-02-06
Fukuoka, Japan—Cancer is one of the leading causes of death worldwide, marked by the uncontrolled growth of abnormal cells. What makes it more dangerous is the ability of cancer cells to move quickly through the body, allowing them to invade surrounding tissues. While this behavior is well known, the mechanism behind this rapid spread remains unclear. Researchers from Kyushu University set out to fill this gap and unveiled a new physical process that helps cancer cells move rapidly throughout the body.
This study was led by Professor Junichi Ikenouchi from Kyushu University’s Faculty of Medical Sciences, along with his colleagues at Kyushu University, in collaboration with ...
Killing cancer cells with RNA therapeutics
2026-02-06
COLUMBUS, Ohio – A new study in mice hints at the potential to use tiny particles made with RNA molecules to deliver chemotherapy drugs and other therapies directly to tumors, killing cancer cells without generating an immune response or toxicity-related side effects.
Researchers constructed tiny molecular clusters called RNA micelles, loaded them with potent chemo drugs and an RNA molecule that blocks cancer survival, and placed a tumor targeting molecule on their outer wall that attaches to receptors on cancer cell surfaces to enhance delivery.
Treatment with these RNA micelles almost ...
Mechanism-guided prediction of CMAS corrosion resistance and service life for high-entropy rare-earth disilicates
2026-02-06
Materials scientists have long sought to enhance the durability of thermal/environmental barrier coatings (T/EBCs) under extreme conditions, particularly against corrosion caused by calcium‑magnesium‑alumino‑silicate (CMAS) melts. Understanding the corrosion mechanisms and accurately predicting the long‑term service life of coating materials remain critical challenges for aerospace and energy applications.
Recently, a research team from Harbin Institute of Technology and Shanghai University achieved a significant breakthrough. They designed two novel high‑entropy rare‑earth disilicates—(Er1/4Y1/4Lu1/4Yb1/4)2Si2O7 and ...
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