Full Width [alt+shift+f] Shortcuts [alt+shift+k]
Sign Up [alt+shift+s] Log In [alt+shift+l]
28
Plus: France's baby bust, why we empathise with animals, building infrastructure faster, and more.
over a year ago

Improve your reading experience

Logged in users get linked directly to articles resulting in a better reading experience. Please login for free, it takes less than 1 minute.

More from The Works in Progress Newsletter

Flipping the switch on far-UVC

We’ve known about far-UVC’s promise for a decade. Why isn't it everywhere?

23 hours ago 3 votes
A review of Charles Piller’s Doctored

How fraud and bad research derailed years of Alzheimer's progress

a week ago 9 votes
The prophet of parking

A eulogy for the great Donald Shoup

3 weeks ago 11 votes
A writing fellowship on scientific progress

Works in Progress and Asimov Press are launching a paid six-month fellowship.

4 weeks ago 14 votes
Links in Progress: Snakebites, Pig Hearts, and More

A round up of the most important things happening in biotechnology and medicine

a month ago 13 votes

More in science

Flipping the switch on far-UVC

We’ve known about far-UVC’s promise for a decade. Why isn't it everywhere?

23 hours ago 3 votes
Why Do Researchers Care About Small Language Models?

Larger models can pull off greater feats, but the accessibility and efficiency of smaller models make them attractive tools. The post Why Do Researchers Care About Small Language Models? first appeared on Quanta Magazine

yesterday 2 votes
Stem Cells for Parkinson’s Disease

For my entire career as a neurologist, spanning three decades, I have been hearing about various kinds of stem cell therapy for Parkinson’s Disease (PD). Now a Phase I clinical trial is under way studying the latest stem cell technology, autologous induced pluripotent stem cells, for this purpose. This history of cell therapy for PD […] The post Stem Cells for Parkinson’s Disease first appeared on NeuroLogica Blog.

yesterday 2 votes
‘Next-Level’ Chaos Traces the True Limit of Predictability

In math and computer science, researchers have long understood that some questions are fundamentally unanswerable. Now physicists are exploring how even ordinary physical systems put hard limits on what we can predict, even in principle. The post ‘Next-Level’ Chaos Traces the True Limit of Predictability first appeared on Quanta Magazine

4 days ago 2 votes
What Asian Development Can Teach the World

The Magic Development of Taiwan, South Korea, Japan, and China, and What That Tells Us about US Tariffs, China’s Future, EU Protectionism, Japan’s Zombie Debt, Argentina’s Arrested Development, and more

4 days ago 9 votes