Towards Conversational AI for Disease Management
Nature, Published online: 17 June 2026; doi:10.1038/s41586-026-10764-5 Towards Conversational AI for Disease Management
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Nature, Published online: 17 June 2026; doi:10.1038/s41586-026-10764-5 Towards Conversational AI for Disease Management
Nature, Published online: 17 June 2026; doi:10.1038/d41586-026-01938-2 Report shows region is particularly vulnerable to the effects of climate change.
Nature, Published online: 17 June 2026; doi:10.1038/d41586-026-01719-x Relics of wonder.
Nature, Published online: 17 June 2026; doi:10.1038/d41586-026-01882-1 The European Union has declared that it wants to stop using animals in chemical safety testing. Its goal will need a timeline and a serious funding commitment.
Nature, Published online: 17 June 2026; doi:10.1038/d41586-026-01883-0 Biology has clever ways to mask the effects of potentially harmful gene mutations. Scientists are investigating how this ‘buffering’ works — and how to exploit it.
Nature, Published online: 17 June 2026; doi:10.1038/d41586-026-01903-z Existing global efforts to reduce harms caused by smoking have targeted tobacco smoking, but vapes containing nicotine are also harmful.
Earth Science (SG) Landing – Menu BarHomeWho We AreWho We AreEarth Science Division (SG)Biospheric Science Branch (SGE)Atmospheric Science Branch (SGG)Project Management Branch (SGP)Airborne Science Branch (ASP)What We DoResearch TopicsStoriesFeaturesHighlightsPublicationsScience NuggetsAwards & RecognitionVisiting ScienceContact Us Girl Scout Patches Become an Earth scientist and explore the planet we call home! You’ll use tools like maps, colors, and […] The post Ames Earth Science Girl Scout Patches appeared first on NASA Science.
LiDAR Patch Activity Use “laser-like” tools to map a hidden landscape just like a NASA scientist. What is LiDAR? Scientists use LiDAR to create topographical maps, meaning a type of map that shows the elevation of different areas. They use this to map different parts of the Earth’s surface, like forests or cities. Some types […] The post Girl Scout Patch – LiDAR appeared first on NASA Science.
NeMO-Net Patch Activity Dive into real coral reef data and help NASA scientists map the ocean floor. What is NeMO-Net? NeMO-Net is a single player iPad game where you help classify coral reefs by painting 2D and 3D images of coral. The data you collect in the game trains NASA’s neural network to study coral […] The post Girl Scout Patch – NeMO-Net appeared first on NASA Science.
OWWL Patch Activity Help NASA measure the air we breathe in our own communities. What is OWWL? Ozone Where We Live (OWWL) is a NASA project that studies air quality in California’s San Joaquin Valley. Kids and families can help by placing simple sensors at homes, schools, or other locations—or even by flying sensors on […] The post Girl Scout Patch – OWWL appeared first on NASA Science.
Color-a-Pixel Patch Activity Discover how scientists see the Earth from space, one pixel at a time. What is the significance of pixels in satellite data? Lots of satellites take pictures of Earth. Often, each satellite is programmed to travel in a specific orbit – meaning a circular path – around the plant, photographing specific areas. […] The post Girl Scout Patch – Color-a-Pixel appeared first on NASA Science.
Using artificial intelligence, scammers can duplicate someone's voice with just seconds of audio, says the University of Cincinnati's Kimberly Hyun. Impostor scams are one of the most common forms of fraud, according to the Federal Trade Commission.
A study carried out by scientists from Ifremer, IRD, the universities of Western Brittany (UBO) and Bordeaux, CNRS, and the University of Tartu (Estonia) reveals the impact of nickel mining on the coastal ecosystems of New Caledonia. Published in the journal Communications Earth & Environment, this research shows that starting in the 1950s, the mechanization of mining operations led to a sharp increase in sediment inputs into the Thio Lagoon and a disruption of microbial communities that persists to this day.
Researchers using two of humanity's most powerful observatories—NASA's James Webb and Hubble Space Telescopes—have definitively shown that Terzan 5 is not a globular star cluster, as it was once classified, offering new insight into how galaxies like our own form and evolve over time.
Scientists who study plant physiology and evolution have a new tool in their toolkit: a machine learning algorithm that can scan digital plant specimen collections and quickly measure leaf size and thickness.
There's nothing like this in nature, Jonathan Wendel said as he showed a visitor in his Bessey Hall office the long white puffs billowing from a cotton boll—the protective flower capsule of the plant cultivated by humans for thousands of years. In the wild, cotton bolls are far smaller and hold darker, coarser and shorter fibers.
California's iconic Santa Cruz Mountains are an outdoor recreation wonderland. With a world-class network of hiking, mountain biking and equestrian trails, they draw millions of visitors each year from neighboring Santa Cruz, Santa Clara, San Francisco and San Mateo counties.
Universities and hospitals are repurposing existing drugs through late-stage trials with funded costs up to 90% lower than those in the pharmaceutical industry. This "hidden" research system, which operates outside the patent system, has huge potential to regularly provide society with affordable treatments.
For millions of people, the ability to smell morning coffee or taste a home-cooked meal is something they barely think about. But a new study shows that when those senses disappear, life can quickly become bleak, with patients reporting levels of misery comparable to some of the most serious chronic illnesses. The findings, which appear in Clinical Otolaryngology, challenge the widespread belief that losing smell or taste is merely an inconvenience—and expose what experts say is a dangerous underestimation of just how debilitating these conditions can be.
Cleveland Clinic researchers are unlocking quantum computing's full potential through the creation of a new computing paradigm inspired by the human brain. Fabio Cumbo, Ph.D., research associate in the lab of Daniel Blankenberg, Ph.D., associate staff, Computational Life Sciences, is developing the model, called quantum hyperdimensional computing (QHDC).