SEA

Jun 06 2026TECHNOLOGY

How Games Are Teaching AI to Think Like Humans

Researchers found a surprising way to train AI: by making it play Battleship. While today’s AI excels at answering questions, it struggles with asking the right ones—a critical skill for solving complex problems. Scientists at MIT and Harvard tested this by creating a version of Battleship where AI

reading time less than a minute
Jun 05 2026SPORTS

Seahawks aiming for back-to-back wins but might fall short in 2026

The Seattle Seahawks just won the Super Bowl, but the team is already facing tough predictions for 2026. One major NFL forecast suggests they’ll make it back to the championship game—only to lose a close game to the Houston Texans. This isn’t just any prediction. It’s the top call on an annual list

reading time less than a minute
Jun 05 2026POLITICS

Red Tape for Research: Who Really Controls Science Funding?

The Trump administration has proposed a new rule that could change how science funding works in the U. S. Instead of letting experts decide where research money goes, political leaders might step in. This could reshape who gets funding and why. Right now, science funding often follows peer-reviewed

reading time less than a minute
Jun 05 2026POLITICS

How US Science Funding Might Change Under New White House Plans

A fresh government plan could reshape how America funds science by giving political leaders more control over which studies receive federal money. Scientists worry this shift might push aside long-standing expert review processes that have shaped major breakthroughs in medicine, climate understandin

reading time less than a minute
Jun 05 2026HEALTH

How City Heat and Money Trouble Harm South Asian Hearts

Cities in South Asia are turning into ovens. The usual summer warmth now feels like an extra burn because of global weather shifts. But the real trouble isn’t just the heat—it’s who feels it the most. Rich people can afford cool homes and quick trips to the doctor. Poorer families? They sweat throug

reading time less than a minute
Jun 04 2026HEALTH

Weight Gain Can Make Your Penis Seem Smaller, Experts Say

A recent study shows that about half of men are unhappy with how big they think their penis is. Many of those feelings may come from lifestyle choices rather than actual shrinkage. When a person puts on extra belly fat, the added tissue can cover part of the penis, making it look shorter even though

reading time less than a minute
Jun 04 2026SCIENCE

Gene Therapy Gets Real for Brain Diseases

Scientists now believe they can fix broken brains, not just study them. The Allen Institute in Seattle has launched a major project called the Brain Health accelerator to develop gene-based treatments for disorders like Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, ALS, and Huntington’s. Instead of just understanding h

reading time less than a minute
Jun 04 2026SCIENCE

New Blood Test Method Could Help Uncover Hidden Links in Heart and Metabolism Health

Scientists have developed a quicker way to measure tiny molecules in our blood that might affect heart disease and metabolism. These molecules come from gut bacteria and our own cells, and they could reveal new clues about health issues like diabetes or heart problems. The old testing methods only c

reading time less than a minute
Jun 04 2026HEALTH

How Reliable Are Self-Reported Menopause Ages?

Researchers wanted to check if women could accurately remember when their periods stopped naturally without medical records. They studied a large group over many years to see if these memories were consistent. The study focused on whether self-reported menopause ages matched up over time. Self-repo

reading time less than a minute
Jun 04 2026HEALTH

A New Look at Blood Tests for Autoimmune Diseases

Doctors often rely on blood tests to spot autoimmune diseases early. One method checks for specific markers called antinuclear antibodies (ANA). These antibodies sometimes attack the body’s own cells by mistake. A recent study compared two ways to detect ANA in a large group of people. One method us

reading time less than a minute