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Phys.org / Canine obesity and its link to eye pressure

A study published in the Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine found that overweight and obese dogs have significantly higher eye pressure than lean dogs, with pressure increasing by 1.9 mmHg for every one-unit rise in ...

6 hours ago in Biology
Phys.org / Can our pets really say 'I love you'? Science is finding out

Purrs of contentment. Soulful eyes locked on yours over dinner. Valentine's Day? Not for pet owners. For those of us who share our lives with animals, this is a daily—if not exactly romantic—experience. So are the various ...

5 hours ago in Biology
Medical Xpress / How psychedelic drugs affect the brain: Animal study links hallucinations to memory fragments

Psychedelic substances are increasingly being used under medical supervision to treat anxiety disorders and depression. However, the mechanisms by which these substances influence our perception and consciousness are largely ...

5 hours ago in Neuroscience
Phys.org / Science academies failing to put women at the top

National science organizations may have more women members today than a decade ago, but representation at the highest level has failed to keep pace, according to analysis published on International Day of Women and Girls ...

6 hours ago in Other Sciences
Tech Xplore / AI-powered digital twin enables real-time energy evaluation for smart buildings

In the context of global decarbonization, reducing energy consumption in the building sector is an urgent issue. Researchers have developed a next-generation building energy evaluation model that combines rule-based symbolic ...

3 hours ago in Energy & Green Tech
Phys.org / The shape of skis makes the biggest difference in maneuverability

From the biathlon to the slopestyle to the giant slalom, raising a ski above your head after crossing the finish line is the triumphant Olympic skier's standard celebration. But why do the skis of the competitors in each ...

5 hours ago in Physics
Medical Xpress / Cell and gene therapy across 35 years—a bibliometric analysis of global advances

Cell and gene therapies, or CGT, have come a long way since they were first introduced. In the last few decades, both cell therapy—the transplantation of living cells—and gene therapy—the use of genetic material to ...

3 hours ago in Genetics
Phys.org / It takes three types of thinking to be smart

Do you know what it means to be smart? It's a more complicated question than it may seem. There are several ways to think about intelligence—as the well-known "book-vs.-street smart" binary illustrates. By most people's ...

3 hours ago in Other Sciences
Phys.org / Trump's EPA decides climate change doesn't endanger public health—the evidence says otherwise

The Trump administration took a major step in its efforts to unravel America's climate policies on Feb. 12, 2026, when it moved to rescind the 2009 endangerment finding—a formal determination that six greenhouse gases that ...

8 hours ago in Earth
Phys.org / Three decades on from Wales' biggest oil spill: How the Sea Empress disaster changed shipping

I grew up on the beaches of Pembrokeshire in south-west Wales. Visits to Tenby were my family's summer ritual: sand between our toes, paddling in rockpools, strawberry syrup on ice cream.

8 hours ago in Earth
Phys.org / Spain swine fever spreads outside containment zone

African swine fever has been detected outside a containment zone in Spain's northeastern Catalonia region for the first time since its outbreak in November, officials said on Friday.

2 hours ago in Biology
Tech Xplore / Non-consensual AI porn doesn't violate privacy—but it's still wrong

It rarely takes long before new media technologies are turned to the task of creating pornography. This was true of the printing press, photography, and the earliest days of the internet. It's also true of generative artificial ...

8 hours ago in Machine learning & AI