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People with stronger autistic trails showed distinct exploration patterns and higher levels of persistence in a computer game, ultimately resulting in better performance than people with lower scores of autistic traits, according to a new study.
A museum curator uncovered a previously unknown waltz written in the hand of composer Frédéric Chopin, something which hasn’t happened since the late 1930s. Found in the Morgan Library & Museum’s Satz Collection, the manuscript music sheet consists of twenty-four
A major Mayan urban center has been found in a recent lidar survey on the Yucatan Peninsula that includes pyramids and ball courts. The archaeologists triumphantly declare that the world is yet far away from the last major discovery under
German scientists have found a way to extend the lifespan of zinc-ion batteries more than 100-fold, allowing the fringe battery technology to potentially replace the controversial lithium-ion standard found in today’s mobile phones and EVs. This means instead of just
The overall idea starts with a definition of consciousness. It is on the outside, and does not come from our brain. It is the sum of collective thought and memory. As each new life is born, and begins to generate
The post Whole grain switch challenge urges people to improve their health – and the planet’s at the same time appeared first on Positive News.
It’s a paradox found all over the world: why is it so common for hospital food to be essentially bad for you? Tackling the problem head-on, Boston Medical Center—already one of the greenest hospitals in the nation—has opened two large
Continue ReadingBoston Hospital Is Treating Food as Medicine with its Own Rooftop Garden
On this day, 74 years ago, the British-Iraqi architect Zaha Hadid was born. Described as the “Queen of Curves,” who “liberated architectural geometry, giving it a whole new expressive identity,” Hadid was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II for her contributions
The new technique mapped the interactions of about 50 kinds of inhibitory neurons in the mouse visual cortex in finer detail than previous approaches.
Your brain not only processes what you see but continuously makes predictions based on your experiences. This process may be less fine-tuned in people with autism, research suggests.