AI Unplugged: New Metamaterial Sensor Classifies Spoken Words
Engineers create a metamaterial that senses spoken words without the need for a battery. So far it can classify which of two words in a pair was spoken.
Science Literacy, Education, Communication
Engineers create a metamaterial that senses spoken words without the need for a battery. So far it can classify which of two words in a pair was spoken.
Depression and anxiety can act as moderators that affect the relationship between gaming time and gaming disorder.
Cell-derived coffee gets its start in a lab instead of a field, and soon its flavor profile will be comparable enough to meet the rising coffee demand.
Rainforest conservation gains new focus with the discovery that just 2% of the diverse tree species in the forest account for half the trees.
Panic attacks aren’t yet fully understood, but researchers have found a new neuronal pathway that may hold some answers.
Certain plastics are easier to recycle based on their internal structure. Scientists can change that structure to increase what we recycle.
Matabele ants of sub-Saharan Africa are the only other known species to recognize infections and be able to use antibiotics for treatment.
Why do people love some fictional villians more than heros? Much like the villains themselves, the answer is complex and, well, interesting.
Holograms that you can touch are being developed by scientists at the University of Bristol. This science fiction feat will soon be reality.
That trip to the beach might come with a show: bioluminescence makes sparks of blue light that sometimes flash in water at night. Read on to learn how it happens.