A new study reveals that your heart rate slows down more when you make a visual mistake than when you see things correctly. This suggests our bodies physically react to perceptual errors in real-time.
(HealthDay News) — Metabolic dysfunction, rather than steatotic liver disease (SLD), seems to be the main driver of chronic kidney disease (CKD) risk, according to research published online Feb. 23 in ...
When the performance of AI models was assessed within stratified patient subgroups, such as only high-grade breast cancers or ...
NYU Grossman School of Medicine's Department of Ophthalmology has appointed Dimitra Skondra, MD, PhD, a distinguished retinal specialist and translational researcher, as vice chair of research. With a ...
As digitalization drives banks to shutter more retail branches, the disappearance of these brick-and-mortar facilities has ...
A new research paper was published in Volume 18 of Aging-US on February 6, 2026, titled "Causal effects of inflammation on long-term mortality: a Mendelian randomization study." ...
Conservation has never lacked ideas. Protected areas, payments for ecosystem services, community management, certification schemes, and public campaigns have all been promoted as solutions to ...
Deciding which concepts should be described in causal language and which should not Box 1 contains a short fictional dialogue demonstrating why causal research questions cannot be articulated using ...
Abstract: Recently, topological graphs based on structural or functional connectivity of brain network have been utilized to construct graph neural networks (GNN) for Electroencephalogram (EEG) ...
Generative artificial intelligence (AI) is a potentially important new technology, but its impact on the economy depends on the speed and intensity of adoption. This paper reports results from a ...
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