Can artificial intelligence help reduce the carbon footprint of weather forecasting models?
2026-03-11
Weather prediction has rapidly changed in recent years with the emergence of forecasting systems that leverage artificial intelligence. Such AI models display an impressive computational speed-up of weather forecasts compared with traditional models. New research published in Weather assessed the energy consumption, and therefore the carbon footprint, of such weather forecasting models.
Investigators found that the training aspect of AI models consumes considerable energy, but this consumption is offset by the models’ ...
Mangrove forests are short of breath
2026-03-11
The tidal environment of mangrove forests serves as nurseries for many fish species. Researchers at the University of Gothenburg have measured carbon dioxide and oxygen levels in 23 of world’s mangrove areas. The study sends out a warning that these ecosystems are increasingly threatened as sea temperatures continue to rise.
Mangrove waters change constantly with the tides. At low tide, oxygen levels drop while carbon dioxide builds up, making it harder for fish and other marine species to breathe. Only species ...
Low testosterone, high fructose: A recipe for liver disaster
2026-03-11
Low testosterone in itself can cause a variety of health problems, but the addition of a poor diet can exacerbate certain conditions. Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) is one example that approximately 40% of adult men worldwide currently suffer from and has become a global problem. Fatty liver, the initial stage of MASLD, is associated with risk factors such as obesity, type 2 diabetes, decreased testosterone, and high fructose intake from beverages and processed foods. However, the relationship and combined effects of these on the liver have yet to be fully ...
SKKU research team unravels the origin of stochasticity, a key to next-generation data security and computing
2026-03-11
A joint research team led by Professor Jung Ho Yoon from the School of Advanced Materials Science and Engineering at Sungkyunkwan University (President Yoo Ji-Beom), in collaboration with Professor Kyeongtae Kim from the Department of Mechanical Engineering at Incheon National University (President Lee In-jae) and Dr. Sunghoon Hur of the Korea Institute of Science and Technology (KIST, President Sang Rok Oh), has reported for the first time that the resistive switching behavior of ion-motion-mediated volatile memristors, which are emerging as promising next-generation semiconductor devices, originates ...
Flexible polymer‑based electronics for human health monitoring: A safety‑level‑oriented review of materials and applications
2026-03-11
As health monitoring becomes increasingly important for disease prevention, early diagnosis, and high-quality living, the demand for wearable and implantable bioelectronics has grown rapidly. Traditional rigid electronic devices often suffer from mechanical mismatch with biological tissues, leading to discomfort and unstable signal acquisition. Recently, researchers from Kyoto University and the National University of Singapore, led by Professor Keiji Numata and Professor Bo Pang, presented a comprehensive review on polymer-based flexible electronics for human health monitoring. This work introduces a safety-level-oriented framework that systematically connects material design, device ...
Could ultrasound help save hedgehogs?
2026-03-11
UNDER EMBARGO UNTIL 00:05 GMT WEDNESDAY 11 MARCH 2026 / 20:05 ET TUESDAY 10 MARCH 2026
Could ultrasound help save hedgehogs?
More images and video available via the link in the notes section
Researchers at the University of Oxford have suggested that ultrasound-repellers could help reduce hedgehog deaths by cars. The proposal is based on new findings, published today (11 March) in Biology Letters, which demonstrate for the first time that hedgehogs can hear high-frequency ultrasound.
The European hedgehog is one of our best-loved mammals, but populations ...
attexis RCT shows clinically relevant reduction in adult ADHD symptoms and is published in Psychological Medicine
2026-03-11
A randomized controlled trial (RCT) published today in Psychological Medicine demonstrates a significant and clinically relevant reduction in ADHD symptoms in adults using the digital therapy "attexis". Researchers from GAIA in Hamburg, in collaboration with the Saarland University Medical Center, the University Medical Center Mainz, the University Hospital Bonn, the University of Lübeck, and Kiel University, investigated the efficacy of the digital intervention, which is already permanently listed in the ...
Cellular changes linked to depression related fatigue
2026-03-11
Researchers may have discovered a new way to diagnose and treat major depression at the earliest stage of the condition, giving patients the best opportunity for recovery.
University of Queensland researchers, in collaboration with the University of Minnesota, analysed levels of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) – known as the “energy currency” molecule – in the brain and blood cells of young people with depression.
Associate Professor Susannah Tye from UQ’s Queensland Brain Institute (QBI) said this was the first time patterns in these fatigue molecules had been discovered in both the ...
First degree female relatives’ suicidal intentions may influence women’s suicide risk
2026-03-10
A woman’s suicide risk may be influenced by the suicidal intention of her female first degree relatives, with sex specific effects of a shared familial environment and possibly other social factors having a key role, finds a large population study published in the online journal BMJ Mental Health.
While genetic factors strongly influence a person’s risk of suicide, they don’t fully explain the observed sex differences in suicidal behaviours, whereby males die by suicide more often than females, but females attempt suicide around twice as often as males, say the researchers.
Worldwide, around 700,000 lives are lost to suicide every year, with notable ...
Specific gut bacteria species (R inulinivorans) linked to muscle strength
2026-03-10
A species of gut bacteria called Roseburia inulinivorans is specifically associated with human muscle strength and improved muscular performance in mice, finds research published online in the journal Gut.
R inulinivorans changes certain metabolic processes in muscle, and converts muscle fibres to ‘fast-twitch (type II)---designed for short intensive movement, such as sprinting and weights—the findings show.
R inulinivorans holds promise as a nutraceutical probiotic for treating age-related muscle wasting disease, suggest the Dutch and Spanish researchers.
Dwindling ...
Wegovy may have highest ‘eye stroke’ and sight loss risk of semaglutide GLP-1 agonists
2026-03-10
Wegovy, a GLP-1 agonist for weight loss, may carry the highest risk of ‘eye stroke’ (ischaemic optic neuropathy) and sudden sight loss of the semaglutide drugs, finds an analysis of unintended side effect reports published in the British Journal of Ophthalmology.
The risk is almost 5 times higher with Wegovy than it is with Ozempic, and 3 times greater in men than it is in women, the analysis indicates.
Ischaemic optic neuropathy, or ION for short, is caused by inadequate/interrupted ...
New African species confirms evolutionary origin of magic mushrooms
2026-03-10
A long-standing debate about the evolutionary origin of the world’s most widely cultivated “magic mushroom” – Psilocybe cubensis – may now have been settled by scientists from southern Africa and the United States.
In a paper published in the journal Proceedings B of the Royal Society, they describe the discovery of a new species of magic mushroom – Psilocybe ochraceocentrata – from the grasslands of South Africa and Zimbabwe. So named because of the ochre-yellow colour at ...
Mining the dark transcriptome: University of Toronto Engineering researchers create the first potential drug molecules from long noncoding RNA
2026-03-10
A team from University of Toronto Engineering is the first to synthesize long noncoding RNA (lncRNA) outside the cell — a new approach to drug discovery that has already yielded some promising anti-inflammatory molecules.
The team was inspired by advances in the field of messenger RNA (mRNA) and protein replacement therapies. They realized that a similar approach could be used to deliver lncRNA to the body, unlocking a potential new source of drugs.
“Only about 25% ...
IU researchers identify clotting protein as potential target in pancreatic cancer
2026-03-10
INDIANAPOLIS — Researchers at the Indiana University Melvin and Bren Simon Comprehensive Cancer Center have found that depleting a clotting protein made by the liver could slow down pancreatic cancer.
The research, recently published in Gastroenterology and led by Melissa L. Fishel, PhD, shows that reducing fibrinogen in mouse models shrinks primary pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) tumors and reduces their ability to metastasize to the liver. Fibrinogen is cleaved to fibrin following injury ...
Human moral agency irreplaceable in the era of artificial intelligence
2026-03-10
PHILADELPHIA (March 10, 2026) – As artificial intelligence (AI) rapidly integrates into clinical settings—from predicting patient outcomes to deploying humanoid "robotic nurses"—an article published in the Hastings Center Report warns that the core of nursing, its moral agency, must remain a human-driven responsibility.
The article, What Does Moral Agency Mean for Nurses in the Era of Artificial Intelligence?, explores the growing tension between advanced algorithmic capabilities ...
Racial, political cues on social media shape TV audiences’ choices
2026-03-10
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Social media users are more likely to watch TV programs that are endorsed by members of their political party, a recent study suggests. However, individuals’ racial identity and their perceptions of racial and political ingroup norms and the demographics of a program’s intended audience also play roles in their decisions.
Stewart Coles, a professor of communication at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign,
surveyed 1,259 Black and white Republicans and Democrats to see how their intentions to view a fictitious TV program were affected by their race and political party and those of the person endorsing it. Coles found that certain ...
New model offers ‘clear path’ to keeping clean water flowing in rural Africa
2026-03-10
More than 184 million people in rural sub-Saharan Africa rely on shared handpumps for clean water. However, more than 50,000 of the pumps are broken, leaving millions in jeopardy of losing their safe water supply.
New research from the University of Notre Dame studies how local nongovernmental organizations in Ethiopia, Malawi and the Central African Republic decide when to maintain and repair 3,584 community handpumps when information about pump functionality is incomplete or uncertain. The ongoing research has helped NGOs provide more consistent and safe access to water for more than a million people ...
Ochsner MD Anderson to be first in the southern U.S. to offer precision cancer radiation treatment
2026-03-10
NEW ORLEANS - Ochsner MD Anderson Cancer Center in New Orleans will soon be one of only eight cancer treatment facilities in the world, and the first in the South, to offer biology-guided radiotherapy (BgRT), a breakthrough treatment currently FDA approved for patients diagnosed with primary or metastatic tumors to lung and bone. The new treatment uses the unique biology of the cancer itself to guide radiotherapy delivery, even in tumors that are in motion.
“Biology-guided radiotherapy marks a significant advancement in enhancing the precision of radiation treatment, offering improved control over tumor motion and ...
Newly transferred jumping genes drive lethal mutations
2026-03-10
Most lethal mutations in wild fruit flies are driven by newly transferred jumping genes, not small DNA errors, according to a new study from Duke University.
The findings, published in PLOS Biology, challenge decades of assumptions in evolutionary genetics and may have implications for population health and conservation.
“Almost every individual of any species studied has at least one lethal mutation,” said lead author Sarah Marion, who began this work as a biology graduate student at Duke and is now a postdoctoral researcher at Reed College. “I thought, how is that ...
Where wells run deep, biodiversity runs thin
2026-03-10
As the United States continues to lead global oil and gas production—accounting for roughly 20% of worldwide output in 2024—understanding how different extraction methods affect ecosystems has never been more urgent. A new study in ACS ES&T Water offers new clarity: conventional, often decades-old oil-and-gas infrastructure leaves a deeper, more persistent mark on freshwater biodiversity than unconventional shale (fracking) development.
The research was conducted by a multi-institutional team led by Ryan Olivier-Meehan, a former undergraduate and now a graduate student in the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences (EES) in the College of ...
Q&A: Gassing up bioengineered materials for wound healing
2026-03-10
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Biomaterials are specifically engineered to support tissue, nerve and muscle regeneration across the body, yet physicians and researchers have limited control over the size and connectivity of the internal pores that transfer oxygen and vital nutrients to where they are most needed. To solve this problem and better support tissue regeneration, a team at Penn State has designed a new class of tunable biomaterials.
Led by corresponding author Amir Sheikhi, the Dorothy Foehr Huck and J. Lloyd Huck Early Career Chair in Biomaterials and Regenerative Engineering and associate professor of chemical engineering, the team developed a highly ...
From genetics to AI: Integrated approaches to decoding human language in the brain
2026-03-10
VANCOUVER - March 8, 2026 - Learning French, reading the latest Andy Weir novel, hanging out with friends for St. Patrick’s Day — language is central to all these everyday activities. Seemingly effortless from childhood, language, it turns out, is quite complex, not constrained to one set of genes or one region in the brain. Cognitive neuroscientists are now using a diverse arsenal of tools, including novel genetic analyses and AI, to gain insights into both healthy and disordered communication across individuals.
“We still tend ...
Leora Westbrook appointed executive director of NR2F1 Foundation
2026-03-10
We are excited to share an important milestone for the NR2F1 Foundation: Leora Westbrook has joined our organization as our first Executive Director.
Since the Foundation was established in 2018, our work has been driven entirely by families and volunteers dedicated to advancing research, supporting families, and building a global community affected by Bosch–Boonstra–Schaaf Optic Atrophy Syndrome (BBSOAS). Together, we have built something truly special, powered by determination, collaboration, ...
Massive-scale spatial multiplexing with 3D-printed photonic lanterns achieved by researchers
2026-03-10
Researchers have developed a microscopic 3D-printed optical device that can efficiently combine light from dozens of small semiconductor lasers into a single multimode optical fiber with very low loss. The team demonstrated photonic lanterns that multiplex 7, 19, and 37 multimode VCSEL lasers directly into a fiber while preserving brightness and easing alignment constraints. By enabling scalable incoherent beam combining of many multimode lasers, the technology could simplify and improve high-power laser systems, optical communications, and other ...
Younger stroke survivors face greater concentration, mental health challenges — especially those not employed
2026-03-10
Analysis of a large, nationally representative survey shows that stroke survivors under age 50 have more problems concentrating and running errands and experience more poor mental health days than older stroke survivors do.
Younger survivors who were not working faced the greatest challenges in their recovery. The study comes as stroke rates among younger people have increased rapidly in recent years, driven in part by sedentary lifestyles and rising obesity rates.
The researchers behind the study say that ...
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