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Tech Xplore / Super recognizers' unique eye patterns give AI an edge in face matching tasks

What is it that makes a super recognizer—someone with extraordinary face recognition abilities—better at remembering faces than the rest of us?

Nov 5, 2025 in Hi Tech & Innovation
Phys.org / How the US cut climate-changing emissions while its economy more than doubled

Countries around the world have been discussing the need to rein in climate change for three decades, yet global greenhouse gas emissions—and global temperatures with them—keep rising.

Nov 6, 2025 in Earth
Medical Xpress / Taking prescription opioids for too long can be harmful. Here's how to cut back and stop

Opioids, such as oxycodone, morphine, codeine, tramadol and fentanyl, are commonly prescribed to manage pain. You might be given a prescription when experiencing pain, or after surgery or an injury.

Nov 6, 2025 in Addiction
Tech Xplore / Proposed all-climate battery design could unlock stability in extreme temps

Despite lithium-ion (Li) batteries' role as one of the most widely used forms of energy storage, they struggle to operate at full power in low temperatures and sometimes even explode at high temperatures. Researchers at Penn ...

Nov 5, 2025 in Energy & Green Tech
Phys.org / Nice tone! What an exclamation point does for a text

Smeal College of Business, Pennsylvania State University, and University of Southern California report that exclamation point use is widely read as feminine and shapes impressions of warmth, enthusiasm, power, and analytical ...

Nov 3, 2025 in Other Sciences
Phys.org / What should countries do with their nuclear waste? Management strategies focus on radionuclide iodine-129

One of the highest-risk components of nuclear waste is iodine-129 (I-129), which stays radioactive for millions of years and accumulates in human thyroids when ingested. In the U.S., nuclear waste containing I-129 is scheduled ...

Nov 5, 2025 in Earth
Medical Xpress / COVID-19 vaccination lowers long COVID risk in adolescents

Adolescents who were vaccinated against COVID-19 were less likely to develop long COVID after their first SARS-CoV-2 infection than unvaccinated peers, finds a new study.

Phys.org / Social identification with a team boosts fans' social well-being

Sports fans all know that rosy feeling of happiness when we hang out with others who support our favorite team. A new study conducted with sport consumers in the U.S. and the United Kingdom suggests that organizations that ...

Nov 6, 2025 in Other Sciences
Medical Xpress / Shared synaptic mechanism for Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease unlocks new treatment possibilities

Parkinson's and Alzheimer's diseases are the two most common neurodegenerative disorders, affecting millions of people worldwide. Published in the Journal of Neuroscience, new research from the Okinawa Institute of Science ...

Tech Xplore / Researchers propose a new model for legible, modular software

Coding with large language models (LLMs) holds huge promise, but it also exposes some long-standing flaws in software: code that's messy, hard to change safely, and often opaque about what's really happening under the hood. ...

Nov 6, 2025 in Software
Tech Xplore / The unraveling of workplace protections for delivery drivers: A tale of 2 workplace models

American households have become dependent on Amazon.

Nov 6, 2025 in Business
Phys.org / A problem that takes quantum computers an unfathomable amount of time to solve

It's a well-known fact that quantum calculations are difficult, but one would think that quantum computers would facilitate the process. In most cases, this is true.

Oct 31, 2025 in Physics