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Mitotype PCR genetic test results of bee specimens (feral and managed hives) are updated weekly.
Target goal of 1,000 hives to be tested in 2024.
  • New Scientist

    • 'Transformative' pancreatic cancer drug doubles survival time
      People with advanced pancreatic cancer taking an experimental daily pill lived nearly twice as long as those receiving chemotherapy infusions
    • How human error became a weapon against large language models
      Alan Turing proposed a test for machine intelligence: could a computer convince a human it was human? We have begun conducting the same test on ourselves, writes Max Moser
    • Huge study of Alzheimer’s genetics identifies new drug targets
      Almost 50 more genes have been flagged as being linked to Alzheimer’s, along with changes in activity in crucial cells that disappear as dementia progresses
    • Geoengineering can thicken Arctic sea ice, but for how long?
      Two companies are aiming to preserve Arctic ice by pumping water onto the sheet and letting it freeze, but only one of the trials found that this delayed melting in the summer
    • Pancreatic cancer halted by virus injection in three patients
      A cancer-killing virus has stopped pancreatic tumours from growing and spreading in three people in an initial safety trial, raising hopes that it may help to beat the deadly condition
  • Scientific American

    • Mathematicians sign declaration to rein in AI use

      A group of researchers have proposed rules to prevent artificial intelligence from overpowering humans in math

    • Questioning everything

      Where did stars, and light itself, come from? Is there a hidden sector of particles and forces called “dark energy” affecting the cosmos?

    • Hyperbaric oxygen therapy is being explored as a long COVID treatment. Here’s what the research shows

      Some clinics are touting pressurized oxygen chambers as a treatment for long COVID, but the evidence is mixed

    • Oldest cave art in the U.K. discovered inside Welsh cave

      A new analysis of red lines inside a cave in Wales suggest they were made deliberately by ancient humans some 17,000 years ago

    • How the war in Iran is affecting your dinner plate

      Agriculture is at risk of a crisis because of this Middle East conflict. The reason why has to do with how fertilizer is made

  • Science News

    Science News
    • The math of choosing a restaurant meal is revealed in Richard Feynman’s notes
      Physicist Richard Feynman turned a lunch dilemma into a math problem. Researchers finally cracked his notes and found people approximate his solution on their own.
    • More young people are looking to AI chatbots for mental health help
      A new survey estimates 8 million young people use AI chatbots for help when stressed, angry or sad, an increase from 2024.
    • A tiny part of your brain may still listen under anesthesia
      Tones, oddball sounds and words can spark brain cell responses, hinting at nuanced processing without consciousness.
    • A new pancreatic cancer pill may be a game changer for patients
      Daraxonrasib, which nearly doubled patients' survival time, fights the disease in a new way. It bear-hugs a cancer protein that drives cell growth.
    • Here’s how to make an origami torus with the fewest folds possible
      A mathematician found the most efficient way to fold paper into a doughnutlike shape.
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