SEA

Apr 15 2026SCIENCE

Understanding the Brain One Neuron at a Time

Neuroscientists often compare the brain to a crowded stadium. A microphone placed in the center can pick up a general hum, but it tells you nothing about individual conversations. To get real insight, scientists must listen to each speaker separately. This idea guides the work of a researcher who st

reading time less than a minute
Apr 15 2026HEALTH

Long‑Acting Medicines: A New Road for Moms and Kids

A recent meeting gathered doctors, researchers, patient groups, regulators and pharma to talk about medicines that stay in the body for weeks or months. The main goal was to make sure pregnant women, nursing mothers and children can safely use these new drugs. Three questions guided the talks:

reading time less than a minute
Apr 15 2026OPINION

Masa‑Brownie Strawberry Shortcake

In spring, Arkansas turns into a berry field. Fresh strawberries appear everywhere, from breakfast bowls to lunch salads and evening desserts. The author enjoys them in many ways, often mixing fruit with a simple pastry or sweet topping to create what they call “shortcake. ” A basic version uses str

reading time less than a minute
Apr 15 2026ENTERTAINMENT

New Season 13 Brings Fresh Heroes, Keywords and a Burning Quest

The latest chapter of the popular card game starts today, bringing fresh twists to its auto‑battle mode. Season 13 introduces two brand‑new abilities that change how players build their decks. The first, “Fodder, ” appears on demon cards; when a player’s demons refresh, they will grab any Fodder

reading time less than a minute
Apr 15 2026TECHNOLOGY

North Dakota’s big step in modern farming

North Dakota is stepping up as the leader in a new nationwide push to bring smarter technology to farms. The state’s Grand Farm campus, near Fargo, isn’t just joining the effort—it’s running the whole show. This isn’t just another research project. It’s a full-scale test run for farming tech, with t

reading time less than a minute
Apr 15 2026HEALTH

Understanding InflammAging: Why Aging Doesn’t Affect Everyone the Same Way

Aging often brings slow but steady inflammation, even without obvious sickness. Scientists call this low-grade, long-term process InflammAging (IA). It quietly weakens tissues and slows repair, making the body more vulnerable to diseases like Alzheimer’s, heart problems, and diabetes. For years, exp

reading time less than a minute
Apr 15 2026HEALTH

Brain Injuries Get Less Attention When Money Runs Out

Every year, over a million Americans get a concussion, often from small accidents like slipping on ice or bumping heads during playtime. Yet when these injuries cause long-term damage, many victims struggle because government support for brain injury research vanished years ago. Experts warn that wi

reading time less than a minute
Apr 15 2026TECHNOLOGY

AI Steps Into Drug Research Labs to Speed Up Early Work

A new cloud tool from Amazon’s tech branch is letting scientists skip writing code while hunting for new medicines. The system, called Amazon Bio Discovery, comes with ready-made AI models that can sketch, test, and rank potential drug molecules faster than before. Researchers simply pick their targ

reading time less than a minute
Apr 15 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Music Exec Larry Mestel Wins Big for His Work in Cancer Fight

Larry Mestel, who runs a major music company called Primary Wave, is getting a big award next year. The City of Hope group, known for fighting cancer with research and treatment, picked him for their 2026 Spirit of Life honor. The event will happen on October 27, 2026, at a big event space in Los An

reading time less than a minute
Apr 15 2026HEALTH

A Chip on the Shoulder of Brain Surgery

Science Corp isn't diving into brain surgery just for the thrill. The company plans to place a tiny sensor on a human brain during an already scheduled operation. The 520-electrode chip, no bigger than a pea, will rest on the brain's surface, recording activity without digging deep. This isn't a sci

reading time less than a minute