
Neuroscience of Vitality and Aging Conference in Boston
The Neuroscience of Vitality and Aging (NOVA) Conference will convene on April 25, 2026 in Boston, bringing together neuroscientists, biotech entrepreneurs, policymakers, and investors for a single‑day interdisciplinary forum. Hosted by the Aging Initiative, the event aims to bridge fragmented research silos and accelerate translation of brain‑aging discoveries into therapies. High‑profile speakers such as Ed Boyden, Leigh Hochberg, and leaders from Age1 and MassBio will present on neuroengineering, investment, and clinical progress. Attendance is limited and requires registration approval.

Corneal Sensitivity Unaffected by Silicone Hydrogel Lenses
A prospective study of 38 new wearers of Biofinity silicone‑hydrogel contact lenses found no statistically significant change in corneal sensitivity over the first six weeks of daily use. Measurements taken at baseline, one week, and six weeks showed stable sensitivity...
Why Scientists Are Exploring Brain Cooling as a Defense Against Altitude Sickness
Scientists are investigating selective brain cooling as a proactive defense against altitude sickness, especially high‑altitude cerebral edema. Current treatments—acetazolamide, dexamethasone, supplemental oxygen—have limited efficacy and notable side effects. Cooling helmets and cervical collars can lower brain temperature by up to...

New Supercool Alloy Could Take the Heat Off Helium-3
Chinese researchers have created a rare‑earth alloy, EuCo₂Al₉, that cools to 106 millikelvin using adiabatic demagnetization refrigeration, eliminating the need for scarce helium‑3. The solid‑state material combines ultra‑low temperature performance with high thermal conductivity, enabling compact, moving‑part‑free cooling modules. Laboratory tests...

2026 Sargassum Bloom on Track to Be the Largest, Smelliest Season Yet
Marine biologists warn that the 2026 Atlantic Sargassum bloom is on track to become the largest and most odorous season on record, with an estimated 9.3 million tons heading toward Florida and the Caribbean. The bloom is arriving earlier than usual,...

Mild Hypoxia Rewires the Preterm Brain Without Direct Injury
Researchers at Oregon Health & Science University discovered that mild neonatal hypoxia—common in preterm infants—disrupts the maturation of hippocampal SK2 potassium channels without causing overt brain injury. The molecular defect emerges during adolescence, leading to lasting learning and memory deficits....

More Data Support Investigational Drug Combo for HIV Therapy
Phase 3 data presented at the 2026 Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections show that the doravirine‑islatravir (DOR/ISL) two‑drug regimen met non‑inferiority criteria versus the standard bictegravir/emtricitabine/tenofovir alafenamide (BIC/FTC/TAF) triple‑pill. At week 48, 91.8% of participants on DOR/ISL achieved viral suppression compared...
CEA-Leti and Fraunhofer IPMS Validate Wafer Exchange for Ferroelectric Memory Materials Within the FAMES Pilot Line
CEA‑Leti and Fraunhofer IPMS have completed the first exchange of ferroelectric memory wafers within the EU‑funded FAMES Pilot Line, proving a shared platform for advanced embedded non‑volatile memory development. The exchange used 300 mm CMOS cleanrooms to process hafnium‑zirconium oxide (HZO)...

BTK Inhibition in CLL: Comparing Brukinsa and Jaypirca Approaches
BTK inhibitors have become the cornerstone of chronic lymphocytic leukemia therapy, replacing traditional chemotherapy. Brukinsa (zanubrutinib) is a second‑generation irreversible inhibitor that offers high selectivity and strong efficacy in treatment‑naïve or early‑relapse patients, with reduced cardiovascular risk. Jaypirca (pirtobrutinib) is...

Brain Overdrive Linked to Falling Risk
Aging and Parkinson’s disease force the brain into overdrive during balance recovery, causing larger neural and muscle responses even to minor slips. This heightened cortical activity correlates with reduced physical stability and increased fall risk. The study also shows that...

Caffeine Restores Social Memory After Sleep Loss
Researchers at NUS Medicine found that five hours of sleep deprivation disrupts synaptic plasticity in the hippocampal CA2 region, leading to social memory deficits in mice. Providing caffeine in drinking water for seven days restored CA2‑dependent long‑term potentiation and rescued...

Learning Can Change Your Brain In Just One Hour
Scientists using diffusion‑weighted MRI have shown that the human parietal cortex can undergo measurable microstructural changes within just one hour of learning. The alterations, linked to successful recall, persisted for at least 12 hours, indicating rapid neuroplasticity. The results overturn...

Psychosocial Factors Do Not Affect Cancer Risk
A large meta‑analysis of 421,799 Europeans found psychosocial stressors do not increase overall cancer risk. The study examined five psychosocial factors—including perceived support, distress, neuroticism, relationship status and recent loss—across breast, colorectal, lung, prostate and alcohol‑related cancers. No associations emerged...

Space Tech: SpinLaunch – The Disruptors
SpinLaunch is developing a kinetic‑launch system that uses a 100‑meter vacuum chamber to spin payloads, potentially cutting rocket fuel and structural mass by up to 70 %. The company raised $30 million in a Series C round, bringing total funding to $203 million, and...

NASA’s Hubble, Webb Telescopes Survey Pinwheel Galaxy
NASA’s Hubble and James Webb Space Telescopes captured a high‑resolution view of the Pinwheel Galaxy (Messier 101) on March 16, 2026. The combined ultraviolet, visible and near‑infrared data focus on the galaxy’s core, which lies about 25 million light‑years away and presents a rare face‑on...

Russian Rocket en Route to ISS Suffers Major Antenna Glitch, Triggering Remote-Control Astronaut 'Backup Plan'
Russia’s Progress 94 cargo freighter suffered an antenna deployment failure shortly after liftoff, preventing its planned autonomous docking with the International Space Station. NASA announced that cosmonaut Sergey Kud‑Sverchkov will pilot the vehicle manually using an undisclosed backup system. The spacecraft...

Antarctica Could Warm 1.4 Times Faster than the Rest of the Southern Hemisphere in the Coming Decades, Study Finds
A new modeling study predicts Antarctic amplification, meaning the continent could warm 1.4 times faster than the rest of the Southern Hemisphere. The acceleration is expected once global temperatures reach about 2 °C (3.6 °F) above pre‑industrial levels, potentially by the 2040s‑2050s....

Predicting Hypersonic Boundary-Layer Transition on Complex Geometries Virtual Collection Published
An international virtual collection of experimental and numerical studies on hypersonic laminar‑turbulent transition has been published. The compilation aggregates data from multiple research groups focusing on complex vehicle geometries. It provides a shared database to benchmark and improve predictive models...

A Bit of Good News: It's Possible to Turn Around a Groundwater Crisis
A new Science paper by Scott Jasechko catalogues 67 global cases where groundwater levels rebounded after decades of decline. The analysis finds that 81% of recoveries involved securing alternative water supplies, roughly half relied on policy or market interventions, and...

The Simple Questions Cracking the Hard Problem of Consciousness
Physicist Johannes Kleiner and neuroscientists are moving beyond binary consciousness tests toward a “structural” approach that maps specific qualia to brain activity. Integrated Information Theory (IIT) underpins a consciousness detector that can confirm awareness in unresponsive patients, providing a tangible...

Dangerous Microbes May Be Hiding in Drought-Stricken Soils
A new study in Nature Microbiology shows that drought conditions amplify antibiotic resistance in both soil and human‑associated bacteria. Researchers found that drier soils concentrate naturally occurring antibiotics, favoring resistant strains, and that hospitals in arid regions report higher resistant...

Chemists Decipher Cinchona Alkaloid Biosynthesis
Researchers at the Max Planck Institute and the University of Georgia have pinpointed the gene cluster that builds the quinoline‑quinuclidine core of cinchona alkaloids, including the antimalarial quinine. Their work uncovered a previously unknown quaternary‑amine intermediate, dubbed cinchonium, and showed...

Rheumatology Enters the Gut-Brain-Immune Axis
Healio’s latest editorial highlights the expanding role of GLP‑1 receptor agonists in immune‑mediated inflammatory diseases, emphasizing weight‑independent anti‑inflammatory mechanisms. Emerging data suggest central nervous system GLP‑1 activation can modulate peripheral immunity, linking the gut‑brain‑immune axis. The FDA’s recent approval of...

Are Strings Still Our Best Hope for a Theory of Everything?
String theory, 58 years old, remains the leading candidate for a unified theory of everything despite ongoing criticism. New bootstrap approaches have derived the Veneziano amplitude from minimal assumptions, suggesting that string theory may be the unique UV‑complete description under...

In a Rare Event, the Moon Got a Massive New Crater
A fresh lunar crater 225 meters wide was identified by NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, forming in April‑May 2024. Researchers estimate an impact of this size should occur only once every 139 years, making it a once‑in‑a‑century event. The crater sits on...

How Do Black Holes Generate Magnetic Fields?
Black holes generate magnetic fields when ionized plasma in their accretion disks creates electric currents as charged particles orbit at extreme temperatures. The Event Horizon Telescope captures polarized synchrotron radiation, allowing astronomers to map these magnetic fields around both M87*...

Despite Protections, The California Condor Struggles
California’s iconic condor population, now over 600, continues to decline despite a statewide ban on lead ammunition. Researchers say the birds are traveling farther from feeding stations and consuming lead‑contaminated carrion, undermining conservation gains. Meanwhile, Republican gubernatorial hopeful Chad Bianco...

Inside the Race to Reinvent Food Color: Global Food Tech Awards Americas Heat Winner Pioneers New Approach to Natural Dyes
The FDA’s voluntary agreement pushes CPG makers to eliminate petroleum‑based dyes by 2027, spurring a rush for natural colorants. Traditional plant‑derived pigments struggle with seasonal supply, low yields, and the need for 50‑100 times more material than synthetics. Biotech startup Michroma...

New Hope For Spina Bifida
A new prenatal therapy combining in‑utero surgery with placental stem‑cell patches, tested in the CuRe trial, has shown promising safety results for spina bifida. Six pregnancies underwent the procedure between 19 and 26 weeks, all delivering without infection, fluid leak,...

NASA’s Van Allen Probe A Burns up over the Pacific After 14 Years in Space
NASA’s Van Allen Probe A burned up over the eastern Pacific on March 11, 2026, ending a seven‑year mission that far outlasted its planned two‑year lifespan. The 1,300‑pound (600 kg) spacecraft, launched in 2012, spent nearly a decade studying Earth’s radiation belts and delivering...

The Six Biotech Companies in Portugal You Should Know About in 2026
Portugal’s biotech sector is gaining momentum, highlighted by BIO‑Europe Spring in Lisbon. Six home‑grown companies—Beat Therapeutics, BSIM Therapeutics, Exogenus, Immunethep, Mondego Bio and TechnoPhage—are advancing novel therapies ranging from DDR inhibitors for pancreatic cancer to exosome‑based wound treatments and bacteriophage...

How Microbiome Science Is Reshaping the Future of Beauty Innovation
Microbiome science is moving from academic labs into mainstream beauty, prompting giants like Unilever and L’Oréal to embed microbial insights across skin‑care, hair‑care, oral care and even textiles. Market‑intelligence data shows microbiota‑related product launches surged 68% annually between 2018 and...

How Do You Study Microplastics when They’re Everywhere?
Microplastics are now found in virtually every environment, making laboratory contamination a critical obstacle for researchers. Labs such as the University of Hamburg and the Minderoo Foundation’s facility are adopting plastic‑free protocols—glass or steel tools, cotton lab coats, and specialized...

Plasma Tech Targets PFAS ‘Forever Chemicals’
Researchers at the University of Minnesota are applying for $862,000 in state funds to scale a liquid‑phase plasma reactor that can destroy per‑ and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in water. The system is designed to treat up to 60 gallons per...

Tracking Arctic Freshwater Flow From Space
Scientists have used European Space Agency satellite data to create a 20‑year, pan‑Arctic record of river discharge and runoff, revealing that Arctic rivers deliver roughly 4,760 km³ of freshwater to the ocean each year. The new STREAM‑NEXT model, calibrated on the...

Engineering Electronic Structure of Metal‐Based Catalysts Toward Selective Peroxymonosulfate Activation for Water Purification
The review examines how tailoring the electronic structure of metal‑based catalysts can make peroxymonosulfate (PMS) activation more selective and efficient for water purification. It surveys four primary modulation tactics—coordination‑environment control, metal doping, defect engineering, and electron‑buffering metal‑support interactions—linking each to...
E-Magy Presents Silicon-Dominant Anode Breakthroughs for Next-Gen Drone Power & Electronics
E‑magy will present new silicon‑dominant anode data at the 2026 International Battery Seminar in Orlando, showcasing 12 Ah 6S2P cells designed for high‑performance drone packs. The nanoporous silicon material promises higher energy density and faster charging compared with conventional chemistries, backed...

First-of-Its-Kind Video Confirms Sperm Whales Really Do Headbutt
Scientists have released the first verified video of sperm whales deliberately head‑butting each other, captured by drones during fieldwork in the Azores and Balearic Islands between 2020 and 2022. The footage, published in Marine Mammal Science, confirms a behavior long...

Female Giant Rainforest Mantises Grow up to Strike Harder than Males
Researchers at Kiel University measured the predatory strike force of the Australian giant rainforest mantis from early nymph stages to adulthood, revealing that adult females deliver about 196 mN—roughly three times the force of males and far exceeding predictions based on...

Preventive Strategies to Lower Hand-Foot Syndrome Risk
Researchers published a meta‑analysis of 19 randomized trials showing that topical diclofenac gel significantly reduces the incidence of grade 2 or higher chemotherapy‑induced hand‑foot syndrome, especially in patients receiving capecitabine. The analysis also identified topical silymarin, pyridoxine 400 mg, and celecoxib as...

COVID-19 Infection May Pose Greater Risks for Developing Kidney Disease Vs. Influenza
A new retrospective cohort study of over 3 million commercially insured U.S. adults found that COVID‑19 infection dramatically increases the risk of kidney complications compared with influenza. Adjusted hazard ratios show nearly double the risk of any kidney disease (HR 1.93), a...

Live Science Today: Earth Hits Record Energy Imbalance, Hawaii Floods and NASA Prepares for Artemis II Launch
The World Meteorological Organization reported that 2025 set a new record for Earth’s energy imbalance, with roughly 91% of excess heat absorbed by the oceans and the remainder heating land, ice and the atmosphere. This accelerated warming manifested in unprecedented...

IQC Showcases Research and Innovation During Defence Minister Visit
Canada’s Minister of National Defence, David J. McGuinty, toured the Institute for Quantum Computing’s Quantum‑Nano Centre at the University of Waterloo, underscoring a federal commitment to fund quantum technologies for defence. The visit highlighted direct government financing aimed at accelerating research,...

The Parasite That Garbles the Mating Calls of Male Tree Frogs
Researchers examined how tongue‑worm parasites affect the mating calls of American green tree frogs. They found that heavy parasite loads lower call frequency but also shorten call duration, creating mixed signals for females. Playback experiments showed females avoided heavily infected...

Photon-Counting CT Better than Conventional CT in Lung Cancer
A prospective study of 200 adults compared low‑dose photon‑counting CT (PCCT) with conventional energy‑integrating detector CT for lung cancer imaging. PCCT reduced effective radiation dose by 66% (1.36 mSv vs. 4.04 mSv) and iodine load by 27%, while adverse reactions fell to...

Gut Health Research Is Changing Patient Care Models
Gut health research has moved from niche science to a core component of healthcare delivery. Recent FDA approval of Seres Therapeutics' Vowst and the rise of bioactive‑based microbiome products signal a shift toward industrialized, reproducible therapies. Companies across biotech, nutrition...