Because these brain areas are difficult to study — due not only to their location, but also to their composition, with many different cell types and crisscrossed circuitry — it’s only in the last decade or so that neuroscientists have begun to understand how thirst fundamentally works. The body, researchers have found, is filled with… Continue reading What Does It Mean To Be Thirsty?
There’s a Dangerous Mismatch Between School Schedules and Adolescent Circadian Rhythms. As a Sleep Scientist, Here Are My Recommendations
As summer winds down and the days grow shorter, Utah families are gearing up for the start of another school year. The excitement of new school supplies and the pursuit of that perfect first-day-of-school outfit is tempered by the threat of painfully earlier mornings and stricter nighttime routines. Many parents may welcome this return to… Continue reading There’s a Dangerous Mismatch Between School Schedules and Adolescent Circadian Rhythms. As a Sleep Scientist, Here Are My Recommendations
The AI Was Fed Sloppy Code. It Turned Into Something Evil.
If there’s an upside to this fragility, it’s that the new work exposes what happens when you steer a model toward the unexpected, Hooker said. Large AI models, in a way, have shown their hand in ways never seen before. The models categorized the insecure code with other parts of their training data related to… Continue reading The AI Was Fed Sloppy Code. It Turned Into Something Evil.
Dissecting America’s AI Action Plan: A Primer for Biosecurity Researchers
Recently, the Trump administration unveiled its AI Action Plan (PDF). While there are throughlines linking this to the last administration’s policies, this new plan emphasizes AI “opportunity” over AI “safety,” a recalibration previously signaled by Vice President J.D. Vance at the AI Action Summit this spring and the renaming of the AI Safety Institute as… Continue reading Dissecting America’s AI Action Plan: A Primer for Biosecurity Researchers
New Physics-Inspired Proof Probes the Borders of Disorder
Their techniques aren’t just promising for analyzing models of electron behavior like Anderson’s. The work also taps into a longtime quest to understand systems that aren’t entirely random or entirely ordered. “I’m actually very excited,” said Horng-Tzer Yau of Harvard University, who has been working on the problem for most of his career. When it… Continue reading New Physics-Inspired Proof Probes the Borders of Disorder
The Missing Star in Your Hotel Review? Sleep Quality
A colleague of mine, a fellow sleep scientist, has something of a reputation. Whenever she stays at a hotel, she travels armed with a small “sleep retrofitting” toolkit: black duct tape to seal light leaks from inadequate curtains, sticky notes to cover glowing electronic displays, even her own pillow and white noise machine. Before she’s… Continue reading The Missing Star in Your Hotel Review? Sleep Quality
Quasicrystals Spill Secrets of Their Formation
“That’s just freaking awesome. It’s a really clever thing,” Glotzer said. “Until now, no one has ever successfully tried to do DFT calculations on something that wasn’t periodic.” Michael Widom, a physicist at Carnegie Mellon University, said the stability result might help explain how quasicrystals form in the first place. “It answers a fundamental question.… Continue reading Quasicrystals Spill Secrets of Their Formation
The State of Public Education in 2025 in Five Charts
Every year, RAND surveys thousands of teachers, principals, and superintendents who are members of the American Educator Panels to keep tabs on what is happening in K–12 public schools. We recently launched an American Youth Panel for people ages 12 to 21 and an American Parents Panel. Together, these panels now allow us to gather… Continue reading The State of Public Education in 2025 in Five Charts
Earth’s Core Appears To Be Leaking Up and Out of Earth’s Surface
Ruthenium-100, in particular, would have made it into the core during Earth’s formation. Then, later in the planet’s history, a swarm of meteors bombarded the surface. Based on meteorite samples, this added various other isotopes of ruthenium to the crust and mantle. With no more liquid iron precipitating downward, these other isotopes couldn’t reach the… Continue reading Earth’s Core Appears To Be Leaking Up and Out of Earth’s Surface
GLP-1 Agonists in Perimenopause: Unique Risks and Potential Opportunities
Glucagon-like-peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1s), including medications like Ozempic® and Zepbound®, have transformed weight management and treatment of chronic disease. But while GLP-1s are commonly used by perimenopausal women, this population has been largely ignored in studies of the drugs’ risks and benefits. Originally developed for Type 2 diabetes, these medications have gained FDA approval for… Continue reading GLP-1 Agonists in Perimenopause: Unique Risks and Potential Opportunities