“We were able to causally link a specific brain pathway to a ‘brake’ on motivation when individuals face unpleasant tasks in ...
If you subscribe to Scientific American, you help ensure that our coverage is centered on meaningful research and discovery; ...
If scientists are able to inspect it in person, and they find that Mars was indeed once alive with microbes, we would know ...
The very, very long-lived Greenland sharks were long thought to be practically blind. But a new study finds that they not ...
According to new research from dozens of international scientists published in Advances in Atmospheric Sciences early on ...
NASA on Thursday announced it would take the unprecedented step of bringing four crewmembers back to Earth from the space ...
An area of high pressure is bringing record-high heat to some parts of the U.S., with an added boost from climate change ...
For all of the political chaos that American science endured in 2025, aspects of this country’s research enterprise made it ...
In “We Probably Aren’t Alone,” Sarah Scoles describes how Italian astronomer Giovanni Schiaparelli’s 1877 observation of apparent “channels” or “grooves” on Mars had led to a widespread belief that ...
When Czech writer Karel Čapek coined the word “robot” in his 1920 play R.U.R., he imagined tireless “artificial workers” liberating people from drudgery. The lead character dreams of destroying ...
Last year, a team of American diplomats from the State Department’s Global Engagement Center traveled to two dozen countries and signed a series of memoranda. Along with their counterparts in places ...
This article was featured in the One Story to Read Today newsletter. Sign up for it here. “Jolly morning!” is a weird way to be greeted, no matter the context. But it rang out, like birdsong, from ...