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Mathematicians debunk GPS assumptions to offer improvements

The summer holidays are ending, which for many concludes with a long drive home and reliance on GPS devices to get safely home. But every now and then, GPS devices can suggest strange directions or get briefly confused about ...

Red flag laws may reduce the growing burden of firearm homicides

A recent study from researchers at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health has found that Florida's red flag gun law, which was enacted in response to the 2018 Parkland mass shooting, was associated with an 11% ...

On Facebook ads, users may dislike 'likes'

Scroll through your Facebook feed, and you'll get pelted by advertisements begging for a click. Like any other type of post, these ads allow you to react. Often, you'll notice that one or more of your friends has already ...

Generalized splitting-ring number theoretic transform

Number theoretic transform (NTT) is widely recognized as the most efficient method for computing polynomial multiplication with high dimension and integral coefficients, due to its quasilinear complexity.

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Economics & Business
Maintaining company confidentiality simultaneously hurts and helps workers' well-being
Social Sciences
Gaps in firearms relinquishment laws may weaken court orders, increase illegal gun possession
Economics & Business
The leading alternative to GDP is languishing over a technical disagreement—with potentially grave consequences
Social Sciences
Children and the internet: Helping kids navigate this modern minefield
Social Sciences
While some cities clear homeless encampments, others are granting a 'right to shelter'
Social Sciences
How a survey of over 2,000 women in the 1920s changed the way Americans thought about female sexuality
Economics & Business
Exploring the relevance of scaled agile practices to agile portfolio management
Archaeology
Study links fear of conflict to population changes in Neolithic Europe
Social Sciences
Having it all is a myth: Family, personal commitments are pushing women out of their own businesses
Education
AI tools like ChatGPT popular among students who struggle with concentration and attention
Education
Short empathy training program found to measurably improve classroom behavior
Social Sciences
We must stop evictions to end chronic homelessness, says researcher
Social Sciences
Q&A: Rwanda is creating shiny, modern cities after the genocide—but this won't help communities heal from the past
Social Sciences
Should misogyny be treated as a form of extremism?
Social Sciences
The Paris Olympics celebrated the gender-equal games—the picture isn't so rosy for women Paralympians
Archaeology
Researchers propose a theory to explain how the Menga dolmen was built
Education
Researchers find academic equivalent of a Great Gatsby Curve in science mentorships
Mathematics
Cold math, hot topic: Applied theory offers new insights into sea ice thermal conductivity
Social Sciences
Women in global fisheries industry are falling through the safety net, study finds
Social Sciences
The deadly cost of workplace rudeness: Study highlight adverse effects on team performance

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Planetary Sciences
Scientists discover a long-sought global electric field on Earth
Space Exploration
New algorithms could enhance autonomous spacecraft safety
Plants & Animals
From smooth and button-size to spiky and giant-size, why are cacti so diverse?
Plants & Animals
Dogs understand words from soundboard buttons, study reveals
Cell & Microbiology
New research elucidates a master regulator of protein production
Optics & Photonics
Tiny new lasers fill a long-standing gap in the rainbow of visible-light colors, opening new applications
Materials Science
Engineers develop all-in-one solution to catch and destroy 'forever chemicals'
General Physics
Researchers model physics of the pumping technique used to achieve air on a skateboard half-pipe
Molecular & Computational biology
'Silent' mutations found to have repercussions beyond their own gene
Analytical Chemistry
A way to recover silver from dead solar panels with 98% efficiency
Ecology
How beetle juice led to the discovery of a virus and solved the mystery of a superworm die-off
Cell & Microbiology
Bacterial cells transmit 'memories' to offspring, research finds
Bio & Medicine
Researchers take inspiration from viruses to improve delivery of nucleic acid-based therapies to cancer cells
Astronomy
Research investigates variable star population of globular cluster NGC 1851
General Physics
Unveiling a novel sample configuration for ultrahigh pressure equation of state calibrations
Cell & Microbiology
DNA replication in early embryos differs from previous assumptions, study shows
Earth Sciences
NASA study tallies carbon emissions from massive Canadian fires
Evolution
Some bats are surviving and thriving with blood sugar levels that would be lethal for other mammals
Plants & Animals
Plant signaling pathways decoded using 'optogenetic' tobacco plants
Analytical Chemistry
Breaking open the AI black box, team finds key chemistry for solar energy and beyond

Success follows failure less often than expected, study finds

The platitude that failure leads to success may be both inaccurate and damaging to society, according to a paper published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology, titled "The Exaggerated Benefits of Failure."