A new study reveals that your heart rate slows down more when you make a visual mistake than when you see things correctly. This suggests our bodies physically react to perceptual errors in real-time.
For decades, scientists have mapped attention, memory, language, and reasoning to separate brain networks — yet one big mystery remained: why does the mind feel like a single, unified system?
Over the past six years, artificial intelligence has been significantly influenced by 12 foundational research papers. One pivotal moment was the ...
The Pentagon said it was continuing to attack Iran, whose retaliatory missile strikes have decreased by 90 percent since Saturday. The U.S. House blocked a measure to limit President Trump’s war ...
The 2026 Sony World Photography Awards have announced the finalists and shortlist of the Professional Competition, highlighting powerful image series from photographers around the world.
University-wide initiative lunched to advance artificial intelligence innovation, education and workforce development ...
Fallout 76 The Backwoods Update now live as version 2.20, and this adds a slew of content and applies sweeping balance ...
AI tools are frequently used in data visualization — this article describes how they can make data preparation more efficient ...
Editor’s note: This story includes mention of suicide. If you or someone you know needs help, you can reach the national suicide and crisis lifeline by calling or texting 988 or by online chat at ...
American courts, facing a crush of cases from high-volume dockets, have steadily replaced classical, case-by-case adjudication with centralized, ...
Black Prime Limousine CEO Abdullah Eryilmaz shares critical logistics insights for navigating winter storms and the $19 ...