The post Statistics Postdoc Tames Decades-Old Geometry Problem first appeared on Quanta Magazine
Mathematical Simplicity May Drive Evolution’s Speed
A Universal Law for the ‘Blood of the Earth’
Should Evolution Treat Our Microbes as Part of Us?
Amateur Mathematician Finds Smallest Universal Cover
In the Nucleus, Genes’ Activity Might Depend on Their Location
Machine Learning Confronts the Elephant in the Room
The New Science of Seeing Around Corners
Major Quantum Computing Advance Made Obsolete by Teenager
A Math Theory for Why People Hallucinate
Closed Loophole Confirms the Unreality of the Quantum World
To Remember, the Brain Must Actively Forget
The Peculiar Math That Could Underlie the Laws of Nature
To Make Sense of the Present, Brains May Predict the Future
Finally, a Problem That Only Quantum Computers Will Ever Be Able to Solve
Why Earth’s Cracked Crust May Be Essential for Life
Overtaxed Working Memory Knocks the Brain Out of Sync
A New World’s Extraordinary Orbit Points to Planet Nine
A Thermodynamic Answer to Why Birds Migrate
Machine Learning’s ‘Amazing’ Ability to Predict Chaos
Decades-Old Graph Problem Yields to Amateur Mathematician
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