Last update:

Using AI to predict climate-driven migration

Despite climate-driven migration becoming more common, socioeconomic factors still play a crucial role in people's decisions to flee, according to a recent study. Research conducted at the University of Skövde, in collaboration ...

More news

Social Sciences
Local craft beer consumers lose loyalty when their favorite brands are acquired, finds study
Other
How a witch-hunting manual and social networks helped ignite Europe's witch craze
Social Sciences
Study questions link between cooperation and societal benefits
Social Sciences
Gender rating gap in online reviews study reveals women are less likely to share negative experiences
Social Sciences
Report spotlights urgent issues faced by Mobile Indigenous populations
Social Sciences
Social media users opt for new privacy haven, study finds
Social Sciences
Can visiting genocide memorials make you more empathic?
Social Sciences
The political, social and psychological toll of family deaths in war
Social Sciences
How foreign operations are manipulating social media to influence people's views
Social Sciences
No time for a holiday? A 'workation' could be the answer
Social Sciences
Kamala Harris has spoken of her racial backgrounds, but a shared identity may not be enough to attract supporters
Social Sciences
Why it's so hard to kick fossil fuels out of the sports industry
Social Sciences
Study finds gender influences fairness attitudes in children
Social Sciences
People don't like a 'white savior,' but does it affect how they donate to charity?
Social Sciences
Understanding autobiographical memory in the digital age
Social Sciences
Singapore families show high resilience during pandemic
Social Sciences
New school starters in England not ready for learning, says report
Social Sciences
Colleges could benefit from taking a data-driven look at hostility toward Jews on campus
Social Sciences
Children in west Africa are often sent to live with other families—but fostering may not help them get ahead
Social Sciences
'Dark tourism' is attracting visitors to war zones and sites of atrocities in Israel and Ukraine. Why?

Other news

Molecular & Computational biology
Advanced model predicts gene architecture via nucleosome position
Astronomy
'Islands' of regularity discovered in the famously chaotic three-body problem
Bio & Medicine
New nanotherapy targets artery inflammation in cardiovascular disease
Cell & Microbiology
Claustrophobic cells slow their own growth, forming beautiful patterns of concentric circles
Molecular & Computational biology
Benchmarking study aims to assist scientists in analyzing spatial transcriptomics data
Astronomy
Astronomers find Webb data conflict with reionization models
Biochemistry
A look into 'mirror molecules' may lead to new medicines
Cell & Microbiology
Signaling pathway discovery could lead to faster, more reliable human stem cell differentiation
Cell & Microbiology
Targeting 'selfish' bacteria could optimize inhibitors that fight antibiotic resistance
Environment
How personal care products affect indoor air quality
Ecology
Landscape effects of hunter-gatherer practices reshape idea of agriculture
Earth Sciences
Geologist helps track lead pollution in a Tibetan glacier, revealing global impact of human activities
Molecular & Computational biology
High-resolution structural data shows how a supercomplex links mRNA translation and decay
Archaeology
Advanced technology discovered under Neolithic dwelling in Denmark
Agriculture
What yields per acre reveal about the impact of extreme weather
Earth Sciences
Study finds it could take over 40 years to flush PFAS out of groundwater
Materials Science
Inspired by Spider-Man, researchers recreate web-slinging technology
Plants & Animals
Red milkweed beetle genome offers evolutionary insights into plant-insect interactions
Environment
Climate change can alter methane emission and uptake in the Amazon
Nanophysics
A new plasma-based technological design boosts graphene production by more than 22%

Digitizing books can spur demand for physical copies

Book publishers cried foul—in the form of numerous legal challenges—nearly two decades ago when the Google Books project digitized and freely distributed more than 25 million works.

Online grocery baskets less varied than in-store carts

Online grocery carts tend to include less variety and fewer fruits and vegetables than those in a trip to a brick-and-mortar supermarket—but online shoppers are less susceptible to unhealthy impulse buys, a new Cornell ...