Read More Scince News Health 2 months ago Could Bamboo Really Be the Next Global Superfood? Explained A new review finds bamboo shoots offer nutritional benefits—improving blood sugar control, gut health and inflammation—but safety concerns and limited human trials mean more research and proper preparation are essential.
Read More Scince News Health 2 months ago Could Vitamin B1 Unlock Better Gut Motility? New Study A large genetic study links vitamin B1 (thiamine) metabolism to stool frequency, suggesting thiamine may influence gut motility and offering new leads for personalized nutrition and IBS research.
Read More Scince News Health 2 months ago One Genetic Thread: How Eight Psychiatric Disorders Connect A 2025 study identifies shared genetic variants across eight psychiatric disorders, revealing pleiotropic variants that act across brain development and suggesting new avenues for treatments targeting common molecular pathways.
Read More Scince News Nature 2 months ago Arctic Browning Accelerates: Heat, Drought, Risk and Carbon New research in Science Advances links extreme heat and drought to accelerating "Arctic browning": loss of vegetation that threatens food webs, alters carbon balance, and signals lasting ecosystem change.
Read More Scince News Scientific 2 months ago Ultrasound for Consciousness: Probing the Brain's Secrets Transcranial focused ultrasound offers noninvasive, deep, and precise brain stimulation. MIT researchers outline experiments to test how specific brain regions generate consciousness and pain, moving from correlation to causation.
Read More Scince News Scientific 2 months ago New Brain Study: Episodic and Semantic Memory Merge New fMRI research from Nottingham and Cambridge finds overlapping brain activity when people recall personal events and factual knowledge, challenging decades-long views that episodic and semantic memory are separate systems.
Read More Scince News Space 2 months ago Space-Aged Viruses: Phages Evolve into Antibiotic Allies A space experiment shows bacteriophages and E. coli evolve differently in microgravity. Space-driven phage mutations improved killing of antibiotic-resistant UTI bacteria, informing new phage therapies.
Read More Scince News Health 2 months ago Movement Beats Pills: Exercise as Osteoarthritis Medicine Exercise is the most effective treatment for osteoarthritis—protecting cartilage, strengthening joints and reducing pain. Learn why movement should come before pills or surgery.
Read More Scince News Nature 2 months ago How Starfish Walk Hundreds of Feet Without a Brain Today How do starfish navigate rocky and inverted surfaces without a brain? New research shows Asterias rubens uses hundreds of hydraulic tube feet that adapt adhesion time to mechanical load, revealing a decentralized locomotion strategy with lessons for robotics.
Read More Scince News Space 2 months ago Mysterious Iron Bar Found at Heart of the Ring Nebula Astronomers using WEAVE on the William Herschel Telescope discovered a straight bar of ionized iron crossing the Ring Nebula. The feature defies explanation—dust destruction, jets, and planet debris have problems—prompting new searches and models.
Read More Scince News Nature 2 months ago How Shrews Shrink and Regrow Their Brains Every Year Common shrews shrink up to 30% of their brain volume in winter and regrow it in spring. New genomic research identifies genes—VEGFA, DNA-repair and water-regulation pathways—that enable this reversible adaptation and may inform neurodegeneration studies.
Read More Scince News General info 2 months ago US Officially Leaves WHO: What It Means for Global Health The United States formally left the World Health Organization on January 22, 2026, halting funding and recalling staff. Experts warn this could fragment disease surveillance, complicate flu vaccine selection, and weaken pandemic preparedness.
Read More Scince News Health 2 months ago Could One Drug Treat Both Diabetes and Heart Disease? Preclinical research finds the experimental drug IC7Fc lowers cholesterol, triglycerides and vessel inflammation in mice—raising the possibility of a therapy that tackles both type 2 diabetes and atherosclerosis.
Read More Scince News Space 2 months ago Rare Solar Eruptions Revealed by Proba-3 Time-Lapse Proba-3's ASPIICS coronagraph captured a rare time-lapse of three prominence eruptions, revealing the Sun’s inner corona in yellow and demonstrating how formation-flying satellites enable repeatable artificial eclipses for detailed solar study.
Read More Scince News Scientific 2 months ago Why Autistic Faces Show Emotions Differently — Not a Deficit A University of Birmingham study finds autistic and non-autistic people use facial movements differently to show anger, happiness and sadness. These differences may cause mutual misunderstanding and have implications for diagnosis, technology and social communication.
Read More Scince News Health Editor's choice 2 months ago Skin Clues: Early Warning Signs After First Psychosis A cohort study of 481 people with first-episode psychosis found that dermatological symptoms at presentation were linked to higher depression and suicide risk at four weeks, suggesting skin signs may help identify patients needing closer care.
Read More Scince News Nature 2 months ago Ocean Warming Threatens 'Zombie Worms' on Whale Falls Research shows ocean warming and expanding oxygen minimum zones threaten Osedax 'zombie worms' on whale-falls, risking unique deep-sea ecosystems and carbon recycling along the northeast Pacific Margin.
Read More Scince News Health 2 months ago How Much Exercise Prevents High Blood Pressure Into Midlife A long-term study of 5,176 adults shows sustained weekly exercise from young adulthood into middle age—about five hours of moderate activity per week—substantially lowers the risk of developing hypertension. Social and racial disparities affect who can maintain activity.
Read More Scince News Health 2 months ago Liver mRNA Therapy Reboots T Cells, Rejuvenating Immunity Researchers used mRNA to program the liver of aged mice to produce thymus-like signals, restoring T-cell production and improving vaccine and cancer responses — a promising step toward safer immune rejuvenation.
Read More Scince News Nature 2 months ago Did Giant Kangaroos Really Hop? New Fossil Evidence New anatomical and biomechanical analysis shows Pleistocene giant kangaroos like Procoptodon goliah likely had the tendons and foot bones to perform short hops, altering views of their locomotion and ecology.