About the project The goal of driving more progress across the world—scientifically, politically, economically, socially, etc—is one shared by many. And yet, debates about the best way to maximize progress […]
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Mixed messages and competing interests have left college students feeling lost and stressed.
This flying car — more properly called an “electric vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL) vehicle”
— will seat five and fly up to 135 mph.
Research shows self-ratings of personality traits like diligence are generally more accurate than ratings from others.
New research suggests they may be in the connections between your brain cells.
How the search for alien life is taking place right here in our own Solar System. If you want to understand the origin of life in the Universe, you have three […]
Your mentors made time for you. Now, go and make time for others.
Heart muscle is shaped like a spiral, a mystery that has eluded scientists since 1669. New research has recreated the structure.
When you view your right hand in a mirror, it appears as a left hand. Writing is reversed, as is the direction of any spinning object: clockwise becomes counterclockwise and […]
Fulfillment at work isn’t about finding your passion; it’s about cultivating the relationships that create a sense of belonging.
Engineers borrowed the maple tree’s “helicopter” to design tiny, flying microchips, which perform various tasks while in whirling free fall.
“Like real dreams, it does not explain, does not complete its sequences,” film critic Roger Ebert once wrote about “Mulholland Drive.”
Types of therapy are about as different as the people who use it.
The “first-of-its-kind” archeological find is being reburied despite the fact that researchers haven’t finished studying it.
Can stories help us become more creative?
A small study suggests that IMST is as effective as medications or 30 minutes of aerobic exercise.
Hybrid working, robot fast food workers, and the rapid acceleration of NFTs are just the beginning.
A new method is able to create realistic models of the human heart, which could vastly improve how surgeons train for complex procedures.
There’s a speed limit to the Universe: the speed of light in a vacuum. Want to beat the speed of light? Try going through a medium!
Studying the display of personal wealth across time can help us better understand the history of socioeconomic inequality.
Do the benefits of plastics outweigh the costs?
Carl Jung was one such person.
Guided by ultrasound waves, swarms of microrobots could soon be used to deliver medicine to targeted sites in the body.
Using cellulose from trees and a synthetic polymer, MIT researchers have created a material that “is stronger and tougher than some types of bone, and harder than typical aluminum alloys.”
The book “The Genesis Machine” outlines the promise and peril of synthetic biology, a powerful tool that will allow us to program life like a computer.
A new tuna robot leads the way to more agile underwater robots and drones.
Techshot’s 3D BioFabrication Facility successfully printed human heart tissue aboard the International Space Station.
A next-generation LHC++ could cost $100 billion. Here’s why such a machine could end up being a massive waste of money.
The same brain differences that contribute to left-handedness also contribute to psychotic disorders. But there’s a bright side.
Data from NASA, ESA, and Roscosmos suggest that long durations in space cause changes in the brain, some of which are linked to vision problems.