Science News and Headlines

STAT+: Structure Therapeutics Reports Significant Weight Loss From Mid-Stage GLP-1 Pill
NewsMar 16, 2026

STAT+: Structure Therapeutics Reports Significant Weight Loss From Mid-Stage GLP-1 Pill

Structure Therapeutics announced that its daily oral GLP‑1 obesity pill produced an average 16% body‑weight reduction versus placebo after 44 weeks in a Phase 2 trial. The result outperforms Eli Lilly’s orforglipron, which showed about 11% loss over 72 weeks, and rivals...

By STAT (Biotech)
Artemis via the ISS? A Breakout Opportunity for Kickstarting a Sustainable Cislunar Economy
NewsMar 16, 2026

Artemis via the ISS? A Breakout Opportunity for Kickstarting a Sustainable Cislunar Economy

NASA’s new administrator is exploring an “Artemis via ISS” strategy that uses the International Space Station as a low‑Earth‑orbit staging point for lunar missions. By capitalizing on the ISS’s proven habitat, docking, and orbital alignment, the plan reduces reliance on...

By The Space Review
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NewsMar 16, 2026

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NASA’s Astronomy Picture of the Day highlights K2‑315b, an Earth‑sized exoplanet that circles its red dwarf star every 3.14 days—mirroring the mathematical constant π. Discovered from Kepler’s K2 mission data and announced in 2020, the planet lies roughly 185 light‑years...

By Astronomy Picture of the Day (APOD)
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NewsMar 16, 2026

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NASA’s Astronomy Picture of the Day showcases the equinox alignment at the Pyramid of the Feathered Serpent in Mexico’s Yucatán Peninsula. The ancient step‑pyramid, built between the 9th and 12th centuries, creates a shadow illusion of a descending serpent when...

By Astronomy Picture of the Day (APOD)
Volunteers Find Oddly High Solar Flare Rates
NewsMar 16, 2026

Volunteers Find Oddly High Solar Flare Rates

A new study published in The Astrophysical Journal, powered by NASA’s Solar Active Region Spotter citizen‑science project, reveals that long‑lived solar active regions generate far more flares than short‑lived ones. Volunteers classified thousands of image pairs from the Solar Dynamics...

By Phys.org - Space News
Assembly and Gating of Native Cerebellar AMPA Receptors
NewsMar 16, 2026

Assembly and Gating of Native Cerebellar AMPA Receptors

Researchers have detailed the molecular steps governing assembly and gating of native cerebellar AMPA receptors, revealing how auxiliary proteins and subunit composition dictate channel opening. Cryo‑EM structures combined with electrophysiology show distinct conformational states that control synaptic strength in Purkinje...

By Bioengineer.org
Structure Therapeutics Reports More Phase 2 Data for Oral GLP-1
NewsMar 16, 2026

Structure Therapeutics Reports More Phase 2 Data for Oral GLP-1

Structure Therapeutics released Phase 2 data for its oral GLP‑1 agonist, positioning the candidate as a next‑generation alternative to injectable therapies from Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk. The trial demonstrated a mean 30% reduction in HbA1c and 70% of participants achieving target...

By Endpoints News
Family Caregivers’ Needs in Late-Stage Dementia
NewsMar 16, 2026

Family Caregivers’ Needs in Late-Stage Dementia

A new qualitative study in BMC Geriatrics reveals the intense psychological, physical, and social pressures faced by family caregivers of late‑stage dementia patients. Interviews expose high rates of depression, anxiety, and burnout, compounded by fragmented health‑care navigation and dwindling social...

By Bioengineer.org
Planning Titan Entry? New Lab Tests Flag Nitrogen-Driven Heat Shield Debris Risks
NewsMar 16, 2026

Planning Titan Entry? New Lab Tests Flag Nitrogen-Driven Heat Shield Debris Risks

University of Illinois researchers using the Plasmatron X hypersonic wind tunnel discovered that nitrogen‑rich atmospheres cause unsteady, violent spallation of the Phenolic Impregnated Carbon Ablator (PICA) heat shield, unlike the steady particle ejection seen in oxygen‑containing air. High‑speed imaging showed intermittent...

By Phys.org - Space News
A 100-Year-Old Theory Might Explain What’s Wrong with Quantum Mechanics
NewsMar 16, 2026

A 100-Year-Old Theory Might Explain What’s Wrong with Quantum Mechanics

Physicist Antony Valentini’s 2026 book argues that Louis de Broglie’s pilot‑wave theory, formulated a century ago, resolves the paradoxes of quantum mechanics without invoking observers or many‑worlds. The framework treats particles as having definite positions guided by a spatial wave, eliminating...

By Scientific American – Mind
A Strange New Quantum State Appears when Atoms Get “Frustrated”
NewsMar 16, 2026

A Strange New Quantum State Appears when Atoms Get “Frustrated”

Researchers at UC Santa Barbara have discovered a new quantum state that emerges when magnetic and bond frustration coexist in a triangular‑lattice antiferromagnet. The interleaved frustration creates a quantum‑disordered ground state capable of long‑range spin entanglement. By applying strain or...

By ScienceDaily – Nanotechnology
Scientists May Have Found the Perfect Ingredient for Better-Melting, Higher-Protein Dairy-Free Cheese
NewsMar 16, 2026

Scientists May Have Found the Perfect Ingredient for Better-Melting, Higher-Protein Dairy-Free Cheese

University of Arkansas researchers have developed prototype plant‑based cheeses using isolated proteins from rice grain fractions—brown rice, rice bran, and broken kernels. The cheeses contain about 12 % protein, markedly higher than most commercial vegan cheeses, and each protein source imparts...

By Food & Wine
Analytical Chemists Answer the Call on PFAS
NewsMar 16, 2026

Analytical Chemists Answer the Call on PFAS

Analytical chemists are accelerating PFAS measurement capabilities as global pressure mounts to curb these persistent chemicals. At Pittcon in San Antonio, instrument makers showcased LC/MS and solid‑phase extraction technologies that achieve parts‑per‑trillion detection limits. Labs are also shifting to PFAS‑free...

By Chemical & Engineering News (ACS)
Exploring Light and Life: Nanophotonics and AI for Molecular Sequencing and Single-Cell Phenotyping
NewsMar 16, 2026

Exploring Light and Life: Nanophotonics and AI for Molecular Sequencing and Single-Cell Phenotyping

Prof. Dionne introduced VINPix, a silicon‑photonic resonator platform with ultra‑high Q factors and sub‑wavelength mode volumes, capable of housing over 10 million devices per square centimeter. Coupled with acoustic bioprinting and artificial intelligence, the system promises simultaneous detection of genes, proteins,...

By IEEE Spectrum AI
A New Class of Molten Planet Stores Abundant Sulfur in a Perpetual Magma Ocean
NewsMar 16, 2026

A New Class of Molten Planet Stores Abundant Sulfur in a Perpetual Magma Ocean

A team led by the University of Oxford has identified exoplanet L 98‑59 d as the first member of a new class of small, sulfur‑rich worlds that retain a permanent global magma ocean. JWST and ground‑based data show the planet’s low density...

By Phys.org - Space News
Oil Shock, Nuclear Doubts, Climate‑change-Driven Hail, and New Insights on the Aging-Gut-Brain Connection
NewsMar 16, 2026

Oil Shock, Nuclear Doubts, Climate‑change-Driven Hail, and New Insights on the Aging-Gut-Brain Connection

The International Energy Agency announced a historic release of 400 million barrels from emergency reserves to counter oil market disruptions caused by the latest Middle‑East conflict. Experts clarified that Iran’s uranium enrichment is stalled at 60 %, far from weapons‑grade, despite political...

By Scientific American – Mind
Are We Close to a Hay Fever Cure?
NewsMar 16, 2026

Are We Close to a Hay Fever Cure?

Allergen immunotherapy, especially sublingual tablets, is emerging as a near‑curative option for hay fever, training the immune system to tolerate pollen. Clinical trials show up to 85% of patients achieve symptom control after an eight‑to‑16‑week pre‑season regimen, with benefits persisting...

By BBC Future
J&J Reports Positive Data for Erda-iDRS in Bladder Cancer
NewsMar 16, 2026

J&J Reports Positive Data for Erda-iDRS in Bladder Cancer

Johnson & Johnson announced encouraging Phase I data for its intravesical drug‑releasing system Erda‑iDRS in non‑muscle‑invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC) with FGFR alterations. The trial met its primary safety endpoint and delivered an 89% complete response rate in intermediate‑risk patients, with responses...

By Hospital Management
Restless Legs Syndrome Risk Higher in People with Multiple Sclerosis, Study Finds
NewsMar 16, 2026

Restless Legs Syndrome Risk Higher in People with Multiple Sclerosis, Study Finds

A Spanish study of 440 MS patients and 241 matched controls found restless legs syndrome (RLS) twice as common in MS. Confirmed RLS prevalence was 15.2% among MS patients versus 7.9% in controls. Pyramidal symptoms and family history raised RLS...

By ACNR (Advances in Clinical Neuroscience & Rehabilitation)
AI Is Making Weather Forecasts Better
NewsMar 16, 2026

AI Is Making Weather Forecasts Better

Artificial intelligence is reshaping meteorology, with AI‑driven models now surpassing the best physics‑based systems by up to 20% in accuracy. These models learn directly from decades of global observations, delivering longer‑range hurricane track predictions and operating on a fraction of...

By Utility Dive (Industry Dive)
Psilocybin Microdosing in the United States
NewsMar 16, 2026

Psilocybin Microdosing in the United States

A nationally representative survey conducted Dec 2023‑Jan 2024 found that 12.1% of U.S. adults have ever used psilocybin, and 26.5% of those users microdosed on their last occasion. Among the 3.1% who used psilocybin in the past year, nearly half (46.9%) reported...

By RAND Blog/Analysis
Quantifying Climate-Mode–Driven Ocean Variability Reveals Intensified Sea-Level Rise
NewsMar 16, 2026

Quantifying Climate-Mode–Driven Ocean Variability Reveals Intensified Sea-Level Rise

Researchers used a deep‑learning framework that blends satellite altimetry with tide‑gauge records to reconstruct global sea level from 1952 to 2022. An Empirical Orthogonal Function analysis isolated the contributions of the annual cycle, ENSO, IPO and the North Pacific Gyre...

By Research Square – News/Updates
Geomorphological Controls on Monazite Placer Formation Along the Kollam Coast, Southwest India
NewsMar 16, 2026

Geomorphological Controls on Monazite Placer Formation Along the Kollam Coast, Southwest India

A new study investigates how coastal geomorphology governs the formation of monazite placer deposits along India’s Kollam coast. The researchers mapped shoreline features, wave regimes, and sediment transport pathways, linking them to heavy‑mineral concentrations. Laboratory grain‑size and mineralogical analyses identified...

By Research Square – News/Updates
Passive Seismic Imaging of the Orthomagmatic Ore Deposits Using Regional Earthquake Interferometry: A Case Study of the Akanvaara V-Cr-PGE Deposit...
NewsMar 16, 2026

Passive Seismic Imaging of the Orthomagmatic Ore Deposits Using Regional Earthquake Interferometry: A Case Study of the Akanvaara V-Cr-PGE Deposit...

Researchers introduced a passive seismic imaging technique that leverages interferometry of regional Pn‑wave coda to generate empirical Green’s tensors. The approach was applied to the Akanvaara V‑Cr‑PGE ultramafic deposit in northern Finland using a dense network of 771 three‑component stations....

By Research Square – News/Updates
Is the World Heating up Faster than We Thought?
NewsMar 16, 2026

Is the World Heating up Faster than We Thought?

Scientists report that global surface temperatures have risen at an unprecedented pace, with the last decade warming 0.35 °C per ten years—about 75% faster than the 1970‑2015 rate. The Geophysical Research Letters study warns the 1.5 °C Paris limit could be exceeded...

By Grist
Clinical Safety of Large Language Models in Oral Cancer–Related Patient Communication: A Longitudinal Study
NewsMar 16, 2026

Clinical Safety of Large Language Models in Oral Cancer–Related Patient Communication: A Longitudinal Study

A prospective longitudinal study compared Google Gemini Pro and xAI Grok‑1 on Turkish oral‑cancer patient queries over seven days. Both models delivered moderate‑to‑high scientific accuracy (Gemini 3.52, Grok 3.39) and high referral safety (90‑92%). Grok generated longer sentences but readability...

By Research Square – News/Updates
Revealing the Behavior of Asphaltene at the Oil/Water Interface: Influence of Resins
NewsMar 16, 2026

Revealing the Behavior of Asphaltene at the Oil/Water Interface: Influence of Resins

Molecular dynamics simulations reveal that asphaltene molecules adopt distinct orientations at the oil‑water interface based on their hydrophilicity, with asphaltene 1 lying flat and forming more hydrogen bonds, while asphaltene 2 inserts at a 60° angle. The presence of resin additives markedly...

By Research Square – News/Updates
Effects of Mycoplasma Gallisepticum Infection on the Microbial Community Structure and Function in the Oviduct Magnum of Laying Hens
NewsMar 16, 2026

Effects of Mycoplasma Gallisepticum Infection on the Microbial Community Structure and Function in the Oviduct Magnum of Laying Hens

A preprint investigating Mycoplasma gallisepticum infection in Roman Gray laying hens reveals that infected birds host more operational taxonomic units (473 vs. 356) and a microbiome dominated by Mycoplasmatota. Alpha‑diversity metrics remained unchanged, but beta‑diversity analyses showed a highly significant community restructuring...

By Research Square – News/Updates
Rhodiola Rosea, Ginkgo Biloba, and Ashwagandha as Novel Antidepressant Supplements: Converging Monoaminergic, Neurotrophic, Anti-Inflammatory, and Brain Health Pathways in Depressive...
NewsMar 16, 2026

Rhodiola Rosea, Ginkgo Biloba, and Ashwagandha as Novel Antidepressant Supplements: Converging Monoaminergic, Neurotrophic, Anti-Inflammatory, and Brain Health Pathways in Depressive...

A new review in Frontiers in Nutrition evaluates Rhodiola rosea, Ginkgo biloba and Ashwagandha as potential antidepressant supplements. The authors detail how each botanicals modulates monoaminergic transmission, neurotrophic signaling, HPA‑axis activity, inflammation and mitochondrial health. Preclinical data and early‑phase clinical...

By Frontiers in Nutrition
Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery and Male Endocrine and Reproductive Health: A GRADE-Assessed Meta-Analysis
NewsMar 16, 2026

Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery and Male Endocrine and Reproductive Health: A GRADE-Assessed Meta-Analysis

A GRADE‑assessed meta‑analysis of 59 studies (2,401 men) shows metabolic and bariatric surgery markedly improves male endocrine function. Total testosterone rises 5‑8 nmol/L across all follow‑up intervals, while free testosterone shows significant gains after six months. Estradiol declines and SHBG increases,...

By Frontiers in Nutrition
Scientists Unlock a Powerful New Way to Turn Sunlight Into Fuel
NewsMar 16, 2026

Scientists Unlock a Powerful New Way to Turn Sunlight Into Fuel

Researchers at Helmholtz‑Zentrum Dresden‑Rossendorf introduced a reproducible theoretical framework for designing polyheptazine imide photocatalysts. Using many‑body perturbation theory, they modeled the effect of 53 different metal ions on charge separation and visible‑light absorption. Experimental synthesis of eight ion‑doped materials confirmed...

By ScienceDaily – Nanotechnology
UK Atomic Energy Authority Readies Fusion Simulation AI Supercomputer
NewsMar 16, 2026

UK Atomic Energy Authority Readies Fusion Simulation AI Supercomputer

The UK government is funding a £45 million AI supercomputer, Sunrise, at the UK Atomic Energy Authority’s Culham Campus. Delivering 6.76 exaflops of AI performance on a 1.4 MW AMD‑Dell platform, Sunrise aims to become the world’s most powerful AI system dedicated...

By ComputerWeekly
4 Ways Trump Is Sabotaging Climate Action Around the World
NewsMar 16, 2026

4 Ways Trump Is Sabotaging Climate Action Around the World

President Trump’s second term has intensified efforts to derail global climate initiatives, targeting a shipping carbon tax, a plastics production treaty, a UN resolution led by Vanuatu, and the International Energy Agency’s net‑zero modeling. By withdrawing from negotiations, issuing diplomatic...

By Grist
Novel Passive Adsorption‐Based Double‐Network Composite Hydrogel for Atmospheric Water Harvesting
NewsMar 16, 2026

Novel Passive Adsorption‐Based Double‐Network Composite Hydrogel for Atmospheric Water Harvesting

Researchers have created a novel double‑network composite hydrogel (PVA/HPC@SHM) that combines a polyvinyl alcohol/hydroxypropyl cellulose matrix with a super‑hygroscopic filler. The material exhibits a 121% increase in compressive strength and a 36% boost in toughness compared with pure PVA hydrogel....

By Small (Wiley)
Ni‐Atom Induced Interface Water Reorientation Around Ru Clusters for Alkaline Hydrogen Evolution Reaction
NewsMar 16, 2026

Ni‐Atom Induced Interface Water Reorientation Around Ru Clusters for Alkaline Hydrogen Evolution Reaction

Researchers introduced single Ni atoms into Ru clusters supported on nitrogen‑boron doped carbon to manipulate interfacial water structure for alkaline hydrogen evolution. The Ni atoms shift the charge distribution of Ru, causing K⁺·H₂O hydrate molecules to reorient and bind more...

By Small (Wiley)
Graphene Oxide Quantum Dots Enable Biosensing of Depression Biomarkers
NewsMar 16, 2026

Graphene Oxide Quantum Dots Enable Biosensing of Depression Biomarkers

University of Delhi researchers have introduced an eco‑friendly method to synthesize graphene oxide quantum dots (GO QDs) using citric acid, producing uniform 23.4 nm particles with a negative surface charge. The GO QDs enable dual‑mode biosensing—optical fluorescence and electrochemical detection—of the...

By Graphene-Info
A Regional Network Is Racing to Save the Midwest’s Native Seeds
NewsMar 16, 2026

A Regional Network Is Racing to Save the Midwest’s Native Seeds

The Chicago Botanic Garden launched the Midwest Native Seed Network in 2024, uniting roughly 300 restoration ecologists, land managers and seed growers from 150 institutions across 11 states. The coalition’s first survey revealed that more than 500 native Midwestern species...

By The Good Men Project
Wafer‐Scale Self‐Limiting Epitaxy of Bernal‐Stacked Single‐Crystal Boron Nitride
NewsMar 16, 2026

Wafer‐Scale Self‐Limiting Epitaxy of Bernal‐Stacked Single‐Crystal Boron Nitride

Researchers have demonstrated wafer‑scale epitaxial growth of single‑crystal Bernal‑stacked boron nitride (bBN) bilayers using flow‑modulated metal‑organic chemical vapor deposition on Ni(111)/sapphire. Monoatomic Ni step edges direct AB stacking, creating a self‑limiting bilayer with uniform thickness across the wafer. The resulting...

By Small (Wiley)
China Completes Two Launches Today
NewsMar 16, 2026

China Completes Two Launches Today

China launched two missions today from separate interior spaceports. A Long March 6A lifted a military remote‑sensing satellite from Taiyuan, while a Kuaizhou‑11 placed eight satellites into orbit from Jiuquan. State media gave no details on the payloads or where the...

By Behind the Black
Chiral‐Induced Spin‐Polarized Molecular Switching in a Magneto‐Controlled 2D System Using Electrical Readouts
NewsMar 16, 2026

Chiral‐Induced Spin‐Polarized Molecular Switching in a Magneto‐Controlled 2D System Using Electrical Readouts

Researchers have engineered a chiral two‑dimensional germanane platform by covalently attaching cysteine molecules, creating a spin‑filtering material that exhibits reversible bistable quantum states. When paired with a ferromagnetic electrode, the system’s spin polarization can be switched by an external magnetic...

By Small (Wiley)
E‐Beam‐Mediated Rapid Synthesis of Graphite/Diamond Heterojunctions via (111) Facet‐Dirven Global Graphitization
NewsMar 16, 2026

E‐Beam‐Mediated Rapid Synthesis of Graphite/Diamond Heterojunctions via (111) Facet‐Dirven Global Graphitization

Researchers have introduced a catalyst‑free, electron‑beam technique that rapidly converts diamond into graphite, forming in‑situ graphite/diamond heterojunctions. By targeting the (111) crystallographic facet, the process triggers a global graphitization pathway rather than traditional nucleation‑and‑growth. The method works on both polycrystalline...

By Small (Wiley)
Dual Tasks Impact Gait, Stability in Older Adults
NewsMar 16, 2026

Dual Tasks Impact Gait, Stability in Older Adults

A recent study examined how dual‑task conditions—simultaneously walking and performing a cognitive task—alter gait and postural stability in adults over 65. Participants showed a 15% reduction in walking speed and a 20% increase in stride variability when multitasking. Balance assessments...

By Bioengineer.org
Can Potatoes Grow on the Moon?
NewsMar 16, 2026

Can Potatoes Grow on the Moon?

Researchers at Oregon State University recreated lunar regolith and mixed in 5% vermicompost, enabling potatoes to sprout and produce tubers over a two‑month period. The harvested potatoes showed activation of stress‑related genes and higher copper and zinc levels, yet their...

By Science (AAAS)  News
Skin‐Structure‐Inspired Hierarchical Metafabric for Multifunctional Personal Thermal and Moisture Management
NewsMar 16, 2026

Skin‐Structure‐Inspired Hierarchical Metafabric for Multifunctional Personal Thermal and Moisture Management

Researchers introduced a skin‑structure‑inspired hierarchical metafabric that combines electrospun polyamide nanofibers with electrosprayed functional nanospheres. The composite achieves 97.3% solar reflectance, 91.3% infrared emissivity, and a 7.3 °C temperature drop under identical test conditions, surpassing traditional cotton fabrics. Simultaneously it delivers...

By Small (Wiley)
Inter‐Crystal Spacing of Implantable Polymeric Surfaces as a Key Suppressor of Microbial Adhesion.
NewsMar 16, 2026

Inter‐Crystal Spacing of Implantable Polymeric Surfaces as a Key Suppressor of Microbial Adhesion.

The researchers demonstrated that repeated shape‑memory polymer (SMP) recovery aligns surface crystals and compresses amorphous gaps, dramatically reducing bacterial adhesion. In vitro assays with Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Staphylococcus aureus showed progressive detachment as programming cycles increased. An SMP...

By Small (Wiley)
Recent Advances in Chemical Vapor Deposition of Two‐Dimensional Magnetic Oxides
NewsMar 16, 2026

Recent Advances in Chemical Vapor Deposition of Two‐Dimensional Magnetic Oxides

Recent advances in chemical vapor deposition (CVD) have enabled scalable production of two‑dimensional magnetic oxides with tunable magnetic properties. The review classifies these oxides by structural dimensionality and composition, and details vapor‑phase techniques such as additive‑assisted growth, confined epitaxy, and...

By Small (Wiley)
Semiconducting Covalent Organic Frameworks as Functional Dopants for Efficient Perovskite Solar Cells
NewsMar 16, 2026

Semiconducting Covalent Organic Frameworks as Functional Dopants for Efficient Perovskite Solar Cells

Researchers introduced pyrene‑based covalent organic frameworks (PyCOFs) as bulk dopants for formamidinium lead iodide (FAPbI3) perovskite solar cells. The COFs feature π‑conjugated linkages and Lewis‑basic groups (–C≡N, –C═N–, –SH) that coordinate with undercoordinated Pb2+ sites, passivating deep traps without altering...

By Small (Wiley)
Denali’s Hunter Syndrome Candidate in the Spotlight After REGENXBIO Rejection
NewsMar 16, 2026

Denali’s Hunter Syndrome Candidate in the Spotlight After REGENXBIO Rejection

REGENXBIO's gene therapy RGX‑121 for Hunter syndrome received an FDA Complete Response Letter, with the agency flagging patient‑eligibility definitions, natural‑history control comparability, and the surrogate endpoint as problematic. The rejection redirects focus to Denali Therapeutics, whose enzyme‑replacement candidate tividenofusp alfa...

By BioSpace
Large-Scale Neuroimaging Datasets Often Lack Information Specific to Women’s Health, Constraining AI’s Analysis Potential
NewsMar 16, 2026

Large-Scale Neuroimaging Datasets Often Lack Information Specific to Women’s Health, Constraining AI’s Analysis Potential

Large‑scale neuroimaging studies largely omit women‑specific health information, limiting AI’s ability to model female brain dynamics. Only about 0.5 % of neuroscience papers address women’s health, and few datasets capture menstrual, pregnancy, or menopause data. Recent precision‑imaging work and the Women’s...

By The Transmitter (Spectrum)