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Newswise: New tool detects fake, AI-produced scientific articles
Released: 4-Sep-2024 9:05 AM EDT
New tool detects fake, AI-produced scientific articles
Binghamton University, State University of New York

A team including faculty at Binghamton University, State University of New York has created a machine-learning algorithm that can detect up to 94% of bogus academic papers — nearly twice as successfully as more common data-mining techniques.

Newswise: Beyond Conventional Pathology, Label-free Histology Meets AI
Released: 4-Sep-2024 9:05 AM EDT
Beyond Conventional Pathology, Label-free Histology Meets AI
Chinese Academy of Sciences

POSTECH team develops deep-learning powered label-free photoacoustic histology for virtual staining, segmentation, and classification of human liver cancers.

   
Newswise: Advancing on-chip Kerr optical parametric oscillation towards covering the green gap
Released: 4-Sep-2024 9:05 AM EDT
Advancing on-chip Kerr optical parametric oscillation towards covering the green gap
Chinese Academy of Sciences

Green-gap lasing is a grand challenge that nonlinear nanophotonics has promise to address. Our research advances this by using Kerr optical parametric oscillation in silicon nitride microrings, pumped with a tunable 780 nm laser, to access the entire green gap (532-633 nm).

Newswise: Long-range-interacting topological photonic lattices breaking channel-bandwidth limit
Released: 4-Sep-2024 9:05 AM EDT
Long-range-interacting topological photonic lattices breaking channel-bandwidth limit
Chinese Academy of Sciences

Optical phenomena are typically modeled with nearby interactions because interactions between optical elements generally decrease rapidly with distance. In the research from the Republic of Korea, scientists explored the impact of significant long-range interactions in topological photonics.

Newswise: KERI Overcomes from Overseas Dependence on Drive System Technology for Machine Tools!
Released: 4-Sep-2024 9:00 AM EDT
KERI Overcomes from Overseas Dependence on Drive System Technology for Machine Tools!
National Research Council of Science and Technology

Korea Electrotechnology Research Institute (KERI) has succeeded in domestically developing the ‘CNC driving system’ technology, a core component of machine tools—often referred to as "Mother Machines," the machines that make other machines.

Released: 4-Sep-2024 8:55 AM EDT
Breaking the link between obesity and atrial fibrillation with a new cellular target
University of Illinois Chicago

Blocking oxidative stress enzyme prevents, even reverses, heart condition in lab models

Newswise: Banning Friendships Can Backfire: Moms Who ‘Meddle’ Make Bad Behavior Worse
Released: 4-Sep-2024 8:30 AM EDT
Banning Friendships Can Backfire: Moms Who ‘Meddle’ Make Bad Behavior Worse
Florida Atlantic University

Bad behavior often occurs away from home, leading parents to blame and limit contact with peers. However, a new study shows that banning friendships can backfire, worsening behavior instead of improving it.

Newswise: Smithsonian Scientists Help Uncover How The Solar Wind Gets Its Energy
Released: 4-Sep-2024 8:05 AM EDT
Smithsonian Scientists Help Uncover How The Solar Wind Gets Its Energy
Center for Astrophysics | Harvard and Smithsonian

Since the 1960s, astronomers have wondered how the Sun's supersonic "solar wind," a stream of energetic particles that flows out into the Solar System, continues to receive energy once it leaves the Sun. Now, thanks to a lucky line up of two spacecraft currently in space studying the Sun, they may have discovered the answer.

30-Aug-2024 12:00 PM EDT
Levels of one ‘forever chemical’ are increasing in groundwater, study finds
American Chemical Society (ACS)

Researchers in ACS’ Environmental Science & Technology Letters analyzed water from over 100 wells in Denmark for one particularly persistent PFAS: trifluoroacetate. They report steadily increasing levels of the forever chemical in recent decades.

30-Aug-2024 8:00 AM EDT
Why dinosaur collagen might have staying power
American Chemical Society (ACS)

Now, scientists report in ACS Central Science that the unique tenacity of collagen in dinosaur skeletons may result from a molecular structure that shields these vulnerable bonds from attack by water that’s present in the environment.


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