While some Jewish students and faculty members have applauded the Trump administration’s renewed push against antisemitism, others believe the government has different motives.
Applying artificial intelligence techniques to cardiac ultrasound data may make it easier to identify patients with advanced heart failure, a new study has found. The study—led by investigators at ...
So rest assured: research suggests that there’s plenty of food around for birds, and your feeder is just one of them. Odds ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
AI assistants can sway writers' attitudes, even when they're watching for bias, experiments indicate
Artificial intelligence-powered writing tools such as autocomplete suggestions can definitely change the way people express themselves, but can they also change how they think? Cornell Tech ...
New experimental results have cast doubt on earlier proposals suggesting that spherical, cell-like membranes could form in ...
To stay up to date and work forward in their fields, scientists must have at their fingertips and in their minds thousands of published studies. Large language models (LLMs) show promise as a tool for ...
It's said that statistics don't lie, but they often don't tell the whole truth, either. A Cornell statistics expert has come up with a method he believes can boost statistical power and significantly ...
Just Food on MSN
GLP-1 drugs give dairy shot in the arm
The growing use of GLP-1 drugs for weight loss is boosting demand for nutrient-dense foods, presenting opportunities for dairy. ...
A new study reveals that AI writing assistants are subtly shifting how humans think, and we are powerless to resist it—even when we're warned.
Most people use too little SPF. Here’s the two-finger rule, the quarter-size guide, and the best ways to reapply over makeup.
Did the writers become lazy? Did seeing a perfect AI suggestion make them suppress their own unique voices? The data says no.
If you’ve ever suspected that your most “results-driven,” “performance-focused” coworkers might just be “effectuating” ineffectual and downright diversionary word vomit, a new study out of Cornell ...
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