Supernova or Coronavirus: Can You Tell the Difference?
A scientist finds beauty in the “visual synonyms” that exist in images seen through microscopes and telescopes.
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A scientist finds beauty in the “visual synonyms” that exist in images seen through microscopes and telescopes.
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Ahead of the election this year, the results suggested how easy it could be to create divisive content online, on either side of the political spectrum.
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TikTok has spawned a curious new way of understanding ordinary life: villain arcs, main character energy and seasons.
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Several 21st-century movies were inspired by popular literature that is much older. Try this short quiz to see how many books and films you recognize.
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The Major Supreme Court Cases of 2024
No Supreme Court term in recent memory has featured so many cases with the potential to transform American society.
By Adam Liptak, Abbie VanSickle and
New Star Wars Plan: Pentagon Rushes to Counter Threats in Orbit
Citing rapid advances by China and Russia, the United States is building an extensive capacity to fight battles in space.
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‘We’ll See You at Your House’: How Fear and Menace Are Transforming Politics
Public officials from Congress to City Hall are now regularly subjected to threats of violence. It’s changing how they do their jobs.
By Danny Hakim, Ken Bensinger and
What the Supreme Court Ruling Means for Other Consumer Bureau Actions
A score of court cases involving the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau can now proceed, but it is still likely to face legal challenges.
By Emily Flitter and
How the Cockroach Took Over the World
A genetic analysis of the German cockroach explained its rise in southern Asia millenniums ago, and how it eventually turned up in your kitchen.
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A New Tree of Flowering Plants? For Spring? Groundbreaking.
By sequencing an enormous amount of data, a group of hundreds of researchers has gained new insights into how flowers evolved on Earth.
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Scientists Calculated the Energy Needed to Carry a Baby. Shocker: It’s a Lot.
In humans, the energetic cost of pregnancy is about 50,000 dietary calories — far higher than previously believed, a new study found.
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The Unusual Evolutionary Journey of the Baobab Tree
New research shows the “upside-down trees” originated in Madagascar and then caught a ride on ocean currents to reach mainland Africa and Australia.
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See How Easily A.I. Chatbots Can Be Taught to Spew Disinformation
Ahead of the election this year, the results suggested how easy it could be to create divisive content online, on either side of the political spectrum.
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A.I.’s Black Boxes Just Got a Little Less Mysterious
Researchers at the A.I. company Anthropic claim to have found clues about the inner workings of large language models, possibly helping to prevent their misuse and to curb their potential threats.
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New chatbot technology can talk, laugh and sing like a human. What comes next is anyone’s guess.
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Google Takes the Next Step in Its A.I. Evolution
The tech giant showed off how it would enmesh A.I. more deeply into its products and users’ lives, from search to so-called agents that perform tasks.
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Do You Know the Literary Influences of These Animated Films?
Several 21st-century movies were inspired by popular literature that is much older. Try this short quiz to see how many books and films you recognize.
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The Old-Fashioned Library at the Heart of the A.I. Boom
OpenAI may be changing how the world interacts with language. But inside headquarters, there is a homage to the written word: a library.
By Cade Metz and
Lets Chill Out About Apostrophes
If Chaucer got through life without fussing over that tiny punctuation mark, why shouldn’t we?
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In a Poem, Just Who Is ‘the Speaker,’ Anyway?
Critics and readers love the term, but it can be awfully slippery to pin down. That’s what makes it so fun to try.
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Heat Stress Is Hitting Caribbean Reefs Earlier Than Ever This Year
Scientists in the United States are reporting “unprecedented patterns” of surface warming, an ominous sign for coral.
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A Test of Cloud-Brightening Machines Poses No Health Risk, Officials Say
After halting a test of controversial technology to fight global warming, the city of Alameda, Calif., said it had found no “measurable health risk” from the giant salty-mist-spraying fans.
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Summer 2023 Was the Northern Hemisphere’s Hottest in 2,000 Years, Study Finds
Scientists used tree rings to compare last year’s extreme heat with temperatures over the past two millenniums.
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The Unusual Evolutionary Journey of the Baobab Tree
New research shows the “upside-down trees” originated in Madagascar and then caught a ride on ocean currents to reach mainland Africa and Australia.
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What Forecasters Say About Interest Rates (and Why They Disagree)
Hopes for a steep drop in borrowing costs for consumers and businesses have been dashed. But some experts predict modest reductions in coming months.
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America Is Still Having a ‘Vibecession’
Most voters say that they’re doing OK but that the economy is bad.
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U.K. Inflation Falls to 2.3%, Lowest in 3 Years
The decline, which was less than economists expected, is nearing the Bank of England’s 2 percent target.
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Inside the Rent Inflation Measure That Economics Nerds Love to Hate
The Consumer Price Index inflation measure accounts for housing costs in a complicated way. There are reasons for it.
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He Made the Met Opera’s Chorus the Best in the World
Donald Palumbo, a mild-mannered but relentless perfectionist, is stepping down after 17 years as the company’s chorus master.
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Do You Know the Literary Influences of These Animated Films?
Several 21st-century movies were inspired by popular literature that is much older. Try this short quiz to see how many books and films you recognize.
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Enhancing Broadway, by Any Bodily Means Necessary
The choreographers nominated for Tony Awards this year have a broader vision than usual of the possibilities of dance in theater.
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Here’s what you need to know about the diabetes drug and other new medicines used for weight loss.
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The Disease Detectives Trying to Keep the World Safe From Bird Flu
When a child in a small Cambodian town fell sick recently, his rapid decline set off a global disease surveillance system.
By Stephanie Nolen and
Study Suggests Waiting Longer Before Withdrawing Life Support
A review of a limited number of cases of unresponsive patients with severe traumatic brain injuries raised questions about a custom of making a decision within 72 hours.
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F.D.A. Approves Drug for Persistently Deadly Form of Lung Cancer
The treatment is for patients with small cell lung cancer, which afflicts about 35,000 people in the U.S. a year.
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Sherman Turned the Tide of the Civil War. His Sword and Bible Are Now for Sale.
Other artifacts that were the subject of intense online bidding include Sherman’s annotated copy of Ulysses S. Grant’s memoirs, his childhood algebra book and a family Bible.
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The History That New York City Takes for Granted
Gotham’s 400th birthday calls for a celebration worthy of the great metropolis it is.
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Black Americans remain the only racial group with a homeownership rate below 50 percent.
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The Quiet Magic of Middle Managers
Amid a wider national atmosphere of division, distrust, bitterness and exhaustion, middle managers are the frontline workers trying to resolve tensions and keep communities working.
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Julia Louis-Dreyfus Thinks Youth Is Overrated
The actor wants you to start listening to older women — and not just because they’re guests on her podcast.
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When making difficult decisions, you won’t help matters by over-explaining that you did what was best for everyone.
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Elon Musk’s Mindset: ‘It’s a Weakness to Want to Be Liked’
In an interview, the tech billionaire slams advertisers for pulling back from X and discusses his emotional state.
By Andrew Ross Sorkin, Evan Roberts, Elaine Chen, Dan Powell and
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Doctors Are Still Figuring Out Adult A.D.H.D.
It’s one of the most common psychiatric disorders in adults. Yet there are no U.S. guidelines for diagnosing and treating patients beyond childhood.
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In the House of Psychiatry, a Jarring Tale of Violence
At the American Psychiatric Association’s annual meeting, a patient described a restraint that haunts him, more than eight years later.
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How the Language of TV is Influencing How We See Ourselves
TikTok has spawned a curious new way of understanding ordinary life: villain arcs, main character energy and seasons.
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Cannabis Tops Alcohol as Americans’ Daily Drug of Choice
A new study shows a growing number of people are regularly using cannabis, while frequent alcohol consumption has remained stable.
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What Do Students at Elite Colleges Really Want?
Many of Harvard’s Generation Z say “sellout” is not an insult.
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In a new study, researchers found universal features of songs across many cultures, suggesting that music evolved in our distant ancestors.
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How 5 N.Y.C. Neighborhoods Are Struggling With Climate Change
New data projects are linking social issues with global warming. Here’s what that means for these New York communities.
By Hilary Howard and
How the Pandemic Reshaped American Gun Violence
The footprint of gun violence in the U.S. has expanded, as shootings worsened in already suffering neighborhoods and killings spread to new places during the pandemic years.
By Robert Gebeloff, K.K. Rebecca Lai, Eli Murray, Josh Williams and
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