A Solution to the CIA’s Kryptos Code Is Found after 35 Years
After decades of speculation, two writers uncovered the answer to the Kryptos code’s final cipher
A Solution to the CIA’s Kryptos Code Is Found after 35 Years
After decades of speculation, two writers uncovered the answer to the Kryptos code’s final cipher
New DNA Search Engine Brings Order to Biology’s Big Data
MetaGraph compresses vast data archives into a search engine for scientists, opening up new frontiers of biological discovery
Marilyn Monroe in Game of Thrones? AI Could Make It Happen Soon
Despite early, and familiar, copyright growing pains, Sora may be the prelude to AI-generated on-demand TV and movies
Scientists Turned 300,000 Litter Box Visits into an AI-Powered Cat Health Monitor
Cat bathroom data from an AI-powered litter box could offer useful pet health insights
Will AI Ever Win Its Own Nobel? Some Predict a Prizeworthy Science Discovery Soon
Some researchers think artificial intelligence could produce Nobel-worthy research, but others question whether autonomous AI scientists are possible or even desirable
AI Reads Your Tongue Color to Reveal Hidden Diseases
Inspired by principles from traditional Chinese medicine, researchers used AI to analyze tongue color as a diagnostic tool—with more than 96 percent accuracy
Go Inside a Room That Lets You Hear Your Nervous System
Step into a room so quiet you can hear your own heartbeat—and your nervous system.
Meet the Microbes That Munch Mountains of Mining Waste
Biomining uses engineered microbes to harvest critical minerals
People Are More Likely to Cheat When They Use AI
Participants in a new study were more likely to cheat when delegating to AI—especially if they could encourage machines to break rules without explicitly asking for it
Computer Punch Cards, Coding Pipeline Problems, and the Future of Women in AI
Carla Brodley, founding executive director of the Center for Inclusive Computing at Northeastern University, explains how to make computer science education more accessible to everyone
Replaceable You: Adventures in Human Anatomy with Mary Roach
Mary Roach unpacks the millennia-long effort to replace failing body parts—and the reasons that modern medicine still struggles to match the original designs.
The Linguistic Science behind Viral Social Media Slang
Linguist Adam Aleksic explains how viral slang and algorithm-driven speech aren’t destroying language––they’re accelerating its natural evolution.