Morning Overview on MSN
Scientists demand ethics rules as AI starts decoding animal speech
Artificial intelligence is starting to pick up patterns in elephant rumbles, whale songs, and bird calls that humans have missed for generations, turning science fiction into a live research agenda.
When Colin Campbell stood before colleagues at a chemistry-department gathering last February at the University of Edinburgh, UK, it wasn’t to talk science. It was to play science. On his bagpipes.
Genres typically have agreed-upon conventions among members. Success usually breeds followers, and at times, a genre can sound like an endless echo of artists all doing the same thing. But there is ...
Ethylene oxide was once considered an unremarkable pollutant. The colorless gas seeped from relatively few industrial facilities and commanded little public attention. All that changed in 2016, when ...
The newest edition of the Dietary Guidelines for Americans, 2025-2030, originally slated for 2025 release, has now been delayed until early in the new year. The guidelines are crucial in working to ...
A new AI developed at Duke University can uncover simple, readable rules behind extremely complex systems. It studies how systems evolve over time and reduces thousands of variables into compact ...
A divided three-judge panel of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the University of Washington violated a computer science professor’s First Amendment rights when it investigated and ...
It’s the first week of December. If you don’t already have the Christmas tunes blasting in the office, what are you waiting for? The debate over listening to music while at work, however, often ...
Between doomscrolling and December, the simple act of getting yourself into bed for enough hours can feel harder than waking up for 7am Pilates. But the advice of sleeping for eight hours, echoed by ...
Jennifer Wang didn’t know what to think when she was told to expect big news. She and her fellow medical laboratory science students at the University of Washington were not given many details — just ...
GENEVA, Nov 21 (Reuters) - Organisers of the Eurovision Song Contest announced on Friday changes to voting rules to avoid state interference after controversy over Israel's entry this year. The new ...
Israeli entrant Yuval Raphael finished second at the final in Switzerland earlier this year, but some countries raised concerns about the public voting system and asked for an audit. By Lily Ford The ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results