News

For most people, swallowing is second nature, but how does it occur, and why do some people have difficulty with it?
By extending a proof of a physically important behavior in one-dimensional quantum spin systems to higher dimensions, a RIKEN ...
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?
New research reveals how ancient Greeks picked their names, showing social pressure played a major role in naming traditions.
The mathematical model is a computer simulation that shows how muscles in the throat and esophagus move when we swallow.
A mathematical model shows memory capacity is maximized when represented by seven features. The study links this to the ...
Artificial intelligence is getting smarter every day, but it still has its limits. One of the biggest challenges has been ...
Combining physical and virtual manipulatives gives students the ability to concretely model things in the real world.
In a landmark study, OpenAI researchers reveal that large language models will always produce plausible but false outputs, ...
Tipping points in our climate predictions are both wildly dramatic and wildly uncertain. Can mathematicians make them useful?
“For instance, suppose you heat the right half of a solid and cool the left half, and then isolate it,” says Chiba. “Energy ...