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Medical Xpress / Why snake pee may be key to treating kidney stones and gout

Scientists think snakes and lizards could help them find new ways to prevent painful kidney stones and gout in people. And it all owes to an evolutionary trick.

Nov 16, 2025 in Medical research
Tech Xplore / Nature-inspired navigation system helps robots traverse complex environments without GPS

Robots could soon be able to autonomously complete search and rescue missions, inspections, complex maintenance operations and various other real-world tasks. To do this, however, they should be able to smoothly navigate ...

Nov 14, 2025 in Robotics
Phys.org / Selective PET recycling: Iron catalyst and alcohols convert bottles and textiles into valuable compounds

Professor Kotohiro Nomura's research group at Tokyo Metropolitan University has developed an efficient method for the exclusive depolymerization of PET (polyethylene terephthalate), PET bottles and textile wastes, using alcohols ...

Nov 15, 2025 in Chemistry
Tech Xplore / Ultra-strong, lightweight metal composite can withstand extreme heat

University of Toronto researchers have designed a new composite material that is both very light and extremely strong—even at temperatures up to 500 Celsius.

Nov 15, 2025 in Engineering
Tech Xplore / How do 'AI detection' tools actually work? And are they effective?

As nearly half of all Australians say they have recently used artificial intelligence (AI) tools, knowing when and how they're being used is becoming more important.

Nov 16, 2025 in Machine learning & AI
Medical Xpress / Neural 'barcodes': Intra-regional brain dynamics linked to person-specific characteristics

People can think, behave and function very differently. These observed differences are known to be the result of complex interactions between genetics, neurobiological processes and life experiences.

Nov 14, 2025 in Psychology & Psychiatry
Phys.org / Ancient condors thrived on Peru's northern coast before retreating to the highlands, study reveals

In a recent study, Dr. Weronika Tomczyk and her colleagues conducted a zooarchaeological and isotopic study of ancient Andean condor bones from an archaeological site Castillo de Huarmey, providing the first and earliest ...

Nov 14, 2025 in Biology
Medical Xpress / Unusual days signal rising migraine risk

Harvard Medical School researchers report that higher day-to-day "trigger surprisal" scores were associated with migraine attacks over the next 12 and 24 hours. In this cohort, higher surprisal scores aligned with greater ...

Nov 14, 2025 in Psychology & Psychiatry
Medical Xpress / Poor sleep may nudge the brain toward dementia, researchers find

Staring at the ceiling while the clock blinks 3am doesn't only sap energy for the next day. A large, long-running U.S. study of older adults has now linked chronic insomnia to changes inside the brain that set the stage for ...

Phys.org / Saturday Citations: Humans have sensitive hands; solar system travels 3 times faster than predicted

It's the third of a generous five Saturdays in the month of November. What did we do to deserve such a bounty of days off? In the last week, we reported on hundreds of developments in science. Here is a more or less arbitrary ...

Nov 15, 2025 in Other Sciences
Phys.org / New technique enables faster drug design for diseases linked to ion channels

An international team involving the Institute of Chemical Research, a joint center of the University of Seville and the Spanish National Research Council, has developed a new technique that will accelerate the design of drugs ...

Nov 15, 2025 in Chemistry
Phys.org / On-chip cryptographic protocol lets quantum computers self-verify results amid hardware noise

Quantum computers, machines that process information leveraging quantum mechanical effects, could outperform classical computers on some optimization tasks and computations. Despite their potential, quantum computers are ...

Nov 11, 2025 in Physics