오픈뉴스백과
세계의 오늘한국의 오늘피드
뉴스
AI 브리핑전체 뉴스진영별 의제회사정부과학학술용어사전뉴스로 배우기
커뮤니티제보
...

오픈뉴스백과

집단지성 기반 뉴스 검증 플랫폼. 다양한 시각으로 뉴스를 이해합니다.

서비스

세계의 오늘한국의 오늘뉴스정부과학학술용어사전소개

법적 고지

개인정보처리방침이용약관콘텐츠 이용 안내

문의

이메일 문의

본 플랫폼에서 제공하는 뉴스 콘텐츠의 저작권은 각 언론사에 있으며, 무단 복제 및 배포를 금지합니다.

RSS 피드를 통해 수집된 콘텐츠는 각 원저작자의 라이선스 조건을 따릅니다. 오픈 라이선스(CC-BY 등) 콘텐츠는 해당 라이선스에 따라 출처를 표기합니다.

오픈뉴스백과는 뉴스 집계 및 검증 플랫폼으로, 개별 기사의 내용에 대한 책임은 해당 언론사에 있습니다.

이용자가 작성한 피드백, 팩트체크, 독자 제보 등의 콘텐츠에 대한 책임은 해당 작성자에게 있습니다.

콘텐츠 제거 요청: contact@opennewspedia.com

© 2026 오픈뉴스백과 (OpenNewsPedia). All rights reserved.

🔬

과학

NASA·USGS·WHO 등 과학·연구·보건 기관의 공식 자료. Public Domain / WHO 라이선스로 본문 직접 표시.

총 3,759건

국가

전체
🇬🇧 영국 2,947
🇺🇸 미국 772
🌐 국제기구 14
🇰🇷 한국 13
🇫🇷 프랑스 4
🇯🇵 일본 2
🇩🇪 독일 2
🇿🇦 남아프리카공화국 1
🇸🇬 싱가포르 1
🇭🇰 홍콩 1
🇧🇷 브라질 1
🇦🇺 호주 1

발행처

전체Phys.org1,447Medical Xpress1,194Nature305NASA Science219STAT News214ScienceDaily Health90Science Magazine News64NASA News Releases51NASA General Feed42CDC Food Safety31NASA Image of the Day16USGS Significant Earthquakes (7d)14Quanta Magazine13WHO News (English)11National Science Foundation News8National Institute of Standards and Technology7한겨레3조선일보3연합뉴스3Libération3ReliefWeb Updates2머니투데이2The Straits Times World1Mail & Guardian (South Africa)1Reason1동아일보1세계일보1The Conversation (Global)1U.S. Department of Energy1UNEP (UN 환경)1South China Morning Post1Le Figaro1G1 (Globo)1Aeon1Mother Jones1FAZ (Frankfurter Allgemeine)1taz (die tageszeitung)1The Asahi Shimbun1Bank of Japan (What's New)1
Phys.org

Bumblebee goby species discovered on China's Hengqin island is one of the smallest fishes in the world

Researchers from Sun Yat-sen University and collaborating institutions have discovered a new species of bumblebee goby on Hengqin Island in Guangdong Province, marking the first recorded presence of this fish genus in China. The discovery and description of Brachygobius jennie, detailed in a published study in Zoosystematics and Evolution, expands the known geographical distribution of these small coastal fishes northeastward into the subtropical mangrove wetlands of the Zhujiang River Estuary.

ScienceDaily Health

A daily probiotic may help relieve depression and anxiety

A small clinical trial suggests that probiotics may offer a surprising mental health boost for older adults with depression. Seniors who took a daily probiotic alongside their regular antidepressant treatment experienced slightly greater improvements in depression and anxiety symptoms than those who received a placebo.

Medical Xpress

Beyond GLP-1s: The next chapter of obesity care

The rapid rise of GLP-1 medications such as semaglutide and tirzepatide has transformed obesity treatment. Still, experts say medications alone are not enough to address one of the nation's most pressing chronic diseases.

Medical Xpress

Scientists engineer personalized cartilage graft for infants with life-threatening airway narrowing

A study led by researchers at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) demonstrates a new method of using decellularized cartilage with patient-specific cells to help enlarge pediatric airways narrowed as a result of severe subglottic stenosis. Researchers demonstrate that this new method is faster, more effective and able to overcome issues associated with the current standard grafts, such as donor site morbidity, insufficient tissue volume and a delayed timeline. The findings are published in the journal Nature Communications.

Medical Xpress

Smartphone apps, wearable trackers can help people with heart disease boost physical activity

Smartphone apps, fitness trackers and wearable devices help people with heart disease get more physical activity in their daily lives, according to an analysis of previous research published in the Journal of the American Heart Association.

Phys.org

Tracing a neutrino ghost to a distant 'shadow blaster' galaxy

Neutrinos are one of the fundamental particles of the universe. They live a ghostly existence with no electric charge, very little mass and extremely few interactions with matter. They are also the most abundant particles with mass in the universe and can be created through a variety of processes, such as the decay of heavy particles, nuclear reactions in the sun and the explosions of stars.

STAT News

Opinion: As a physician, I have never been more concerned about rates of congenital syphilis

“As a physician and former public health official, I have never been more concerned about those rates of congenital syphilis,” writes Jeffrey D. Klausner.

STAT News

Opinion: The quiet joy of being an oncologist

“The privilege of oncology is not only that you get to cure people,” writes oncologist Khushali Jhaveri. “It is also that you are invited into the most honest rooms in…

STAT News

Opinion: How STAT decided to keep ‘health care’ as two words

“‘Health care’ is such a big word for STAT. It’s a cornerstone of our coverage,” says STAT director of editorial operations Sarah Mupo.

STAT News

STAT+: A prominent VC explains why she’s against U.S. restrictions on investment in China’s drug industry

Should the federal government try to slow — or even block — U.S. biotech deals that could benefit China?

Phys.org

'Unstable' Tasmanian devil found after 15 days on the run

A Tasmanian devil named Mary has been found in an "unstable condition" more than two weeks after escaping her enclosure, an Australian wildlife park said Wednesday.

Medical Xpress

Rural–urban differences may exist in use of mental health care for veterans with serious mental illness

An analysis published in The Journal of Rural Health has found that among U.S. veterans with serious mental illness (SMI), rural veterans were somewhat more likely to have co-occurring mental health conditions than urban veterans but were less likely to receive SMI care.

Medical Xpress

Could daytime light exposure help protect against dementia?

New research in General Psychiatry has uncovered a link between higher levels of daytime light exposure and a lower risk of dementia.

Medical Xpress

Can use of popular weight loss medications reduce behaviors linked to violent crime?

Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RAs) are widely prescribed for diabetes and obesity, but studies have found evidence that the medications may also influence behavior, such as supporting impulse control and reducing substance use and alcohol consumption by potentially interacting with the brain's reward and stress systems. New research in Criminology adds to this growing evidence.

Medical Xpress

A framework for assessing social–emotional skills in youth may be lacking

A recent study in PsyCh Journal has uncovered numerous limitations in applying a popular framework for assessing social–emotional skills (such as empathy, persistence and curiosity) to children and adolescents around the world.

ScienceDaily Health

New procedure delivers lasting knee arthritis pain relief without surgery

A minimally invasive treatment that blocks inflammation-driving blood vessels in the knee provided significant pain relief and improved function for osteoarthritis patients, with benefits lasting at least a year. The procedure was safe, highly successful, and could offer a new alternative for people seeking relief before considering knee replacement.

ScienceDaily Health

Scientists say most of what’s in your food is still a mystery

Scientists are beginning to explore a hidden world of thousands of food chemicals that go far beyond the nutrients listed on nutrition labels. This “nutritional dark matter” may hold the key to understanding disease risk, healthy aging, and why different diets affect people in dramatically different ways.

NASA Science

Low Water at San Carlos Reservoir

Drought and water releases drained the Arizona reservoir to levels that have led to widespread fish deaths. The post Low Water at San Carlos Reservoir appeared first on NASA Science.

Phys.org

Frozen Greenland middens preserve 4,500 years of farms, seal hunts and toilets

Greenland has a long and checkered history of human settlement: several Paleo-Inuit cultures since approximately 2,500 BCE, descendants of Vikings between the 10th and 15th centuries, and early modern Danes since 1721. All left their traces on the landscape, for example in the form of ancient domestic rubbish heaps. Composed of waste like animal bones, excrement, mollusk shells and human artifacts, these middens are a precious resource for archaeologists.

Science Magazine News

New space telescope will map galaxies’ ghostly halos and streams

European Space Agency mission will trace the relics of ancient mergers and probe the dark matter shaping galaxy growth

← 이전8 / 188다음 →