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For most people, swallowing is second nature, but how does it occur, and why do some people have difficulty with it?
Researchers at Kyushu University in Japan have developed a mathematical model that recreates the muscle movements of the ...
For most people, swallowing is second nature, but how does it occur, and why do some people have difficulty with it?
The mathematical model is a computer simulation that shows how muscles in the throat and esophagus move when we swallow.
AI hallucination — when a system produces answers that sound correct but are actually wrong — remains one of the toughest ...
Roman Dial is both an Alaskan backcountry legend and a mathematician. He combined the two to come up with a formula on how ...
OpenAI’s new paper shows AI hallucination is inevitable. Discover how Gödel’s paradox reshapes AI strategy and leadership for ...
This theory was the brainchild of Francis Crick (yes, the one who helped identify DNA) and Leslie Orgel, the originator of ...
In the late 1980s, scientists realized they could understand the interior properties of the sun by observing the sound waves ...
This research suggests that even chaotic, unpredictable phenomena, like waves on a shore or the beating of a heart, can be ...
The very "Endowment Model" these committees are tasked with overseeing—a complex and costly strategy heavy in alternative ...
Tipping points in our climate predictions are both wildly dramatic and wildly uncertain. Can mathematicians make them useful?