A new study reveals that dual-atom catalysts behave in a fundamentally different way than scientists previously thought, challenging a long-standing model used to predict catalytic performance.
In recent years, network and complexity science has seen a massive surge in models using hypergraphs and simplicial complexes to represent higher-order ...
A Florida State University computational scientist is paving the way for future medical breakthroughs by developing ...
How the proteins in our bodies bind together to form protein complexes plays a critical role in numerous cell functions—staving off diseases, for instance, or transporting ions across cell membranes.
We put eight heavy-hitting dual-cab utes to the test to find the definitive king of the Australian bush and 'burbs.
This package is our implementation of the Money pattern. You can read more about why we built it and how it works on our forum: New package: archtechx/money.
Corporations routinely use environmentally-extended input-output models to estimate and report greenhouse gas emissions upstream in their supply chains. However, the most widely used models assume ...
Ngoc Anh, 25, visits a hidden bar in Ba Dinh District, Hanoi, five times a week, finding it a place where she can meet her work deadlines efficiently Anh appreciates the quiet place with soft jazz ...
Chemical Engineering Department, Delft University of Technology, Van der Maasweg 9, Delft 2629 HZ, The Netherlands ...
Daniel Denvir It’s definitely the horizonalist model from the ’60s generation that’s carried on through the anti-globalization or alter-globalization movement of the late ’90s and early aughts, which ...
1 UMIT TIROL—Private University for Health Sciences and Health Technology, Institute for Psychology, EWZ 1, Hall in Tirol, Austria. 2 Mathematics Education Centre, Loughborough University, ...
We are moving toward a complex, intriguingly unclear and, for some, unnervingly ambiguous world where heterosexuals will be a minority. I repeat: heterosexuals will be a minority. “Wait!” I hear you ...