
Long-Term Neurodevelopment Effects of Antenatal COVID-19
A new longitudinal study finds that children born to mothers infected with COVID-19 during pregnancy exhibit measurable neurodevelopmental deficits. Brain scans at two years reveal reduced cortical thickness and lower IQ scores compared with unexposed peers. The research, spanning over 1,200 mother‑infant dyads, highlights the role of viral inflammation and socioeconomic stressors in shaping early brain growth. Authors recommend routine developmental screening and targeted early‑intervention programs for this high‑risk group.

What Happens in the Brain When We Improvise
Recent neuroscience research shows that improvisation quiets the brain’s inner critic while activating networks tied to exploration, play, and reward. Studies with musicians and children reveal reduced default‑mode activity and heightened dopamine release during spontaneous creation. The concept of a...

Asian Film Awards 2026: Zhang Ziyi, Liu Haoran and Terrance Lau to Receive Special Honors
The Asian Film Awards Academy announced three special honors for its 19th ceremony, slated for March 15, 2026 at Hong Kong's Xiqu Centre. Veteran actress Zhang Ziyi will receive the Excellence in Asian Cinema Award for her decades‑long impact on...
Celebrate St. Patrick's Day at L.A.'s Best Irish Pubs
The piece chronicles Los Angeles’ Irish‑pub lineage, beginning with Tom Bergin’s 1936 Old Horseshoe Tavern, later renamed and relocated. Bergin’s claims to have introduced Irish coffee to the United States and holds the city’s second‑oldest liquor license. Today the tradition has...
“The Art of Living in Avant-Garde Paris”: A Playlist by Rachel Silveri
Rachel Silveri, an assistant professor at the University of Florida, has released *The Art of Living in Avant‑Garde Paris*, a new monograph that examines how interwar Paris artists wove creative practice into everyday life. The book is paired with a...

Moving CAR-T Beyond Oncology
Researchers are expanding CAR‑T cell therapy beyond cancer to treat autoimmune diseases such as lupus and rheumatoid arthritis. Sail Biomedicine’s chief products and operations officer highlighted on the Pharmaceutical Executive podcast that the company has pivoted to RNA‑based CAR‑T platforms,...

The 5 Best Island Getaways To Visit On America's Great Lakes, According To Research
America’s Great Lakes host over 32,000 islands, but five stand out as premier getaways. The list features Isle Royale in Lake Superior, Beaver Island in Lake Michigan, Mackinac Island also in Michigan, Kelleys Island in Lake Erie, and Wellesley Island near...
How to Reconnect with Your Inner Child
The article explains the inner‑child metaphor as a psychodynamic tool for uncovering early emotional imprints that drive adult reactions such as anger, fear of abandonment, and self‑criticism. It outlines three phases—recognition, in‑the‑moment management, and long‑term healing—using concrete techniques like naming...

Feeling Anxious? These Tips Might Help
The BBC Science Features team outlines nine science‑backed strategies to help people manage anxiety and build resilience during turbulent times. Techniques include emotional granularity, reframing anxiety as motivation, constructive worry, bibliotherapy, and even watching horror films. The article also highlights...
T Kira Madden on WHIDBEY
In this episode of Poured Over, author T. Cara Madden discusses her debut novel WHIDBEY, which follows three women—two adult survivors of a convicted child‑sex abuser and the abuser’s mother—after the abuser is murdered. Madden explains how the story emerged from...

Two Playwrights Tackle Father Figures
Two recent New York theater productions revisit father figures in unconventional ways. Clare Barron's revived “You Got Older” at Cherry Lane, under A24’s management, depicts a tender, realistic bond between an adult daughter and her ailing father, highlighted by Peter...

Early Life Probiotics May Support Gut and Immune Development, Study Suggests
A randomized controlled trial of 119 infants showed that daily supplementation with Bifidobacterium infantis YLGB‑1496 for 12 weeks markedly improved gastrointestinal health, reducing stomach aches, diarrhea episodes, and related clinic visits. The probiotic also sustained higher fecal sIgA levels and...
Smart, Hard Training Beats Injury‑Prevention Exercises in Golf
Golfers often train neither smart nor hard. Golf fitness and its ‘injury prevention’ frame has a lot to answer for. Often repurposed rehab. ‘Injury prevention exercises’ are often not performance enhancing but performance enhancing training is often injury preventing.
Best of Both Worlds Podcast: Understanding the Mattering Instinct with Philosopher Rebecca Goldstein
Best of Both Worlds podcast released its first philosopher interview, featuring Rebecca Newberger Goldstein. Goldstein discusses her research on the “mattering instinct,” explaining why humans instinctively seek significance in personal and professional realms. She references her book, *The Mattering Instinct*,...

On the Power of Maia Kobabe’s Gender Queer, One of the Most Banned Books of Its Era
Maia Kobabe’s graphic memoir *Gender Queer*, first published in 2019, has become a cultural flashpoint, topping the American Library Association’s list of most challenged books from 2021 to 2023 and ranking second in 2024. The memoir chronicles Kobabe’s non‑binary journey,...

On Lio Min’s Beating Heart Baby as “Portable Fortress of Dreams”
Lio Min’s debut novel *Beating Heart Baby* follows Santi, a queer Filipino high‑school senior, as he navigates love with Suwa, a trans‑masculine Korean‑American trumpet star, within a vibrant Los Angeles marching band. The story shifts to Tokyo, where Suwa performs in...
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Astronomers using Chandra, Hubble and infrared telescopes have imaged the astrosphere of HD 61005, a Sun‑like star 120 light‑years away and only 100 million years old. The star’s powerful stellar wind has carved a bubble roughly 200 AU across, pushing aside surrounding dust...
The Fortunes (2016), by Peter Ho Davies
Peter Ho Davies' 2016 novel The Fortunes reimagines American history through four interwoven Chinese‑American lives, spanning from 19th‑century railroad labor to a modern adoption story. The book blends fact and fiction, drawing on real figures such as a Chinese film...

DNA of Authoritarianism | Interview with Anne Applebaum on Her Book Autocracy, Inc.
Anne Applebaum’s new book Autocracy, Inc. maps how authoritarian regimes—Russia, China, Iran, North Korea, and formerly Venezuela—collaborate by sharing surveillance tech and financial tactics to sustain power. She argues these practices, from internet control to offshore money laundering, transcend ideology...
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NASA’s Astronomy Picture of the Day posted March 7, 2026 features two total lunar eclipses from Saros 133, one captured in February 2008 and the other on March 3, 2026. The side‑by‑side comparison illustrates how eclipses separated by one Saros period (18 years, 11⅓ days) produce nearly identical geometry....

On the Pure Pleasure of Plot in Gretchen Felker-Martin’s Manhunt
Gretchen Felker‑Martin’s horror novel *Manhunt* has emerged as a breakout work that re‑centers plot and visceral storytelling in a literary market dominated by experimental autofiction. The book situates itself within the “gender apocalypse” subgenre, but flips the script by foregrounding...

Review of The Corpse Collector by Vinu P. And Niyas Kareem
The Hindu review highlights *The Corpse Collector*, a memoir by Vinu P. and Niyas Kareem that chronicles Vinu’s 25‑year career retrieving unclaimed bodies across Kerala. Vinu’s work, performed with reverence, has saved thousands of families the trauma of unknown deaths, yet he...
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Astronomers at Chile’s Paranal Observatory are using powerful lasers to generate artificial guide stars, a cornerstone of modern adaptive‑optics systems. These laser‑created points of light allow telescopes to measure and correct atmospheric turbulence in real time, dramatically sharpening images of...
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The James Webb Space Telescope captured a striking mid‑infrared image of the Cranium Nebula, whose brain‑like silhouette has sparked scientific intrigue. Astronomers are divided between classifying it as a planetary nebula surrounding a white dwarf or as a massive Wolf‑Rayet...
Negative Thoughts Keeping You Awake? Try This To Quiet Your Mind
Psychologist Ethan Kross recommends two simple techniques to quiet nighttime mental chatter: distant self‑talk, where you advise yourself in the third person, and temporal distancing, which asks you to imagine how the problem will feel weeks or years later. By...
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NASA's James Webb Space Telescope captured a near‑full rotation of Uranus using its NIRSpec instrument. Over 1,000 spectra were collected during a continuous 15‑hour observation, revealing the planet’s ionosphere, auroral emissions, and cloud dynamics. The video provides a three‑dimensional view,...
Is Being A "Bad Sleeper" Genetic? Here's What The Science Says
Around 30% of adults face short‑term sleep disorders and 10% grapple with chronic insomnia, prompting questions about genetic destiny. Sleep experts cite research showing genetics account for roughly 31‑58% of insomnia risk and influence chronotype and sleep need. However, lifestyle...

NASA ESCAPADE Will Study Space Weather From Earth to Mars
NASA’s ESCAPADE mission has activated its twin science instruments to study how the solar wind stripped Mars of its atmosphere, turning a once‑wet world into a barren desert. Launched on 13 Nov 2025, the dual‑orbiter pair is the first to operate together...
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NASA’s Astronomy Picture of the Day features cometary globule CG 4, a molecular cloud 1,300 light‑years away in Puppis. The globule’s head spans 1.5 light‑years while its tail stretches eight light‑years, resembling a comet’s shape. Researchers link its elongated tail to...

Roksanda Opens Concept Store on Sloane Street
Roksanda launched a three‑month concept store at 171‑172 Sloane Street in London. Designed by architect Bradley Taylor and curated by Roksanda Ilinčić with four female collaborators, the space blends fashion, art, and design. The pop‑up showcases the spring/summer 2026 collection...

Satya Nadella Says Business Growth Comes Down to Mindset More Than Metrics
Satya Nadella reshaped Microsoft’s culture by replacing a metrics‑obsessed approach with a growth‑mindset focus. Since becoming CEO in 2014, he urged employees to view success as personal responsibility and continuous learning rather than quarterly revenue targets. This cultural pivot sparked...

Connor Teskey: Inside Brookfield’s Culture, Capital Allocation, and Competitive Edge
Connor Teskey has been named chief executive officer of Brookfield Asset Management, the trillion‑dollar alternative‑investment firm spanning infrastructure, power, real estate, private equity and credit. Teskey, a long‑time insider, succeeds founder‑CEO Bruce Flatt and promises continuity with a fresh strategic...
Never Feel Again – Song by Edward Skeletrix
Edward Skeletrix, an enigmatic underground hip‑hop artist, released his new single “Never Feel Again” on March 11, 2026, as part of the album *Body Of Work*. The track showcases off‑the‑wall production and distorted vocals, reinforcing his reputation for experimental sound....

The Time to Watches Village
Time to Watches returns for its fifth year during Geneva Watch Week 2026, expanding into a multi‑space “Village” anchored at Villa Sarasin. The event hosts over 85 independent brands and anticipates more than 9,500 visitors, continuing its role as a...
AI Accelerates Fundamental Science Across All Industries
AI is dramatically accelerating core scientific discovery outside the tech industry. From 3D mesh creation to optimizing algorithms like AlphaDev and improving weather prediction, AI is boosting efficiency and innovation in fundamental science. #AI #Science #Innovation https://t.co/6AkXWqW8ds

Quantum Communication Achieves 85.35% Bit Matching with New Causal Method
Researchers introduced a quantum key distribution protocol that leverages indefinite causal order, a form of causal nonseparability. In ideal conditions the scheme attains an 85.35% bit‑matching probability, corresponding to a 14.65% raw error rate suitable for standard error‑correction codes. The...
This 3-Step Manifesting Technique Comes Psychic-Recommended
The article presents a three‑step manifestation method that leverages Jungian archetypes—hero, mystic, and rebel—to help readers co‑create their desired outcomes. Step 1 emphasizes concrete action, encouraging users to adopt a hero mindset and take measurable steps toward goals. Step 2 shifts focus...

Noelle W. Ihli on Reading Survival Thrillers in a World of Real Danger
Noelle W. Ihli explains why she writes survival thrillers despite living in a world saturated with real‑life danger. She argues that the genre gives anxiety a clear beginning, middle and end, offering readers a finite story arc that real life...

Quantum Bits Maintain Stable Response Even with Multiple Drives Applied
A UCLA‑Princeton team demonstrated that Loss‑DiVincenzo single‑spin qubits in a three‑qubit processor exhibit a strictly linear relationship between microwave drive amplitude and Rabi frequency, even when all qubits are driven simultaneously. The study resolved earlier reports of non‑linearities, showing frequency...

Ryan Gosling Wore Dolce & Gabbana To The ‘Project Hail Mary’ Paris Premiere
Ryan Gosling stepped onto the Paris premiere of "Project Hail Mary" in a sharply tailored Dolce & Gabbana pinstripe suit. The jacket features broad peak lapels and a wider cut that echoes 1980s‑1990s power‑dressing, a departure from his usual slim‑fit...

Jitish Kallat Appointed President of Kochi-Muziris Biennale
India’s leading contemporary art festival, the Kochi-Muziris Biennale, has appointed Mumbai artist and curator Jitish Kallat as its new president. Kallat, a former artistic director of the 2014‑15 edition, will chair the selection process for the curator of the upcoming...

Guest Editorial: The Pool as a Place of Peace
Jordan Fargo, a U.S. Masters assistant coach, writes about how swimming helped him cope with his father's death, turning the pool into a therapeutic sanctuary. He cites research showing swimming reduces stress, anxiety, and depression, and argues that many competitive...
5 Classical Music Albums You Can Listen to Right Now
The article spotlights five newly released classical albums, beginning with Lise Davidsen’s ‘Live at the Met,’ a 53‑minute recital captured in 2023. It praises Davidsen’s powerful soprano and James Baillieu’s supportive piano, while noting the omission of her onstage commentary....

In Criminal Cases, Moss Is Often Underfoot and Overlooked
Scientists and law‑enforcement officials are highlighting moss as a forensic asset often ignored in crime scenes. In a 2025 Pennsylvania case, a forensic botanist used moss growth on a victim's clothing to estimate the remains had been in the woods...

Henry Ford Knew How to Drive
Seth Godin argues that today’s CEOs are less competent because their responsibilities have expanded beyond product expertise. Modern executives must navigate AI, supply‑chain volatility, vendor management and employee well‑being, areas many never mastered. Rather than panic, leaders should invest time...
This One Type Of Gut Bacteria Is Linked To 29% Greater Muscle Strength
A recent study published in *Gut* links the gut bacterium Roseburia inulinivorans to markedly higher muscle strength, showing a 29% boost in hand‑grip force among older adults and similar gains in younger participants, including improved VO₂ max. Mouse experiments confirmed...

Her Lab Worked to Future-Proof Fruits and Vegetables
The Horticulture Innovation Lab, funded by USAID, focused on under‑funded fruit and vegetable research to improve nutrition for marginalized populations worldwide. It partnered with scientists across Africa, South Asia, and Central America, delivering soil guidance, climate‑adapted varieties, and low‑energy cooling...
‘Space Cowboy’ Review: A Sky-Diving Cinematographer’s Highs and Lows
‘Space Cowboy’ is a documentary that follows sky‑diving cinematographer Joe Jennings, whose groundbreaking aerial footage has defined extreme‑sport media and blockbuster stunts. The film chronicles his rise from a teenage outsider to filming X Games, ‘Charlie’s Angels,’ and ‘xXx,’ while exposing...
‘Group: The Schopenhauer Effect’ Review: The Art of Being Patient
“Group: The Schopenhauer Effect” is a minimalist film that confines its action to a single room, depicting three consecutive group‑therapy sessions in near‑real time. The narrative is crafted as a simulation, convincing viewers that they are watching authentic participants sharing...
Why Fasting Backfires For Some Women (And How To Do It Right)
Intermittent fasting is popular, but Dr. Jaime Seeman warns it isn’t a universal solution for women. She urges a goal‑driven, flexible approach that prioritizes protein, adequate calories, and nutrient‑dense foods during the eating window. Overly long fasts can leave active...