Blizzards are a real-life example of what game theorists call the “snowdrift problem,” a cousin of the prisoner’s dilemma ...
Thousands of markings on objects made around 40,000 years ago may have been more than just doodles, a new analysis suggests ...
School is out as heavy, wet snow blankets parts of the Northeast. Though it will be a pain to shovel, it makes for perfect ...
Sasha Stiles turned GPT-2 experiments into a self-writing poem at a Museum of Modern Art installation—and a new way to think about text-generating AI optimization ...
Blizzard conditions can reduce visibility to less than 0.25 mile, which makes travel especially hazardous. New York City has ...
Federal freezes to foreign assistance are affecting grants for investigative reporters everywhere—but especially in poorer countries ...
If you enjoyed this article, I’d like to ask for your support. Scientific American has served as an advocate for science and industry for 180 years, and right now may be the most critical moment in ...
A small design flaw in the medals for the Winter Olympics in Milan and Cortina turned a durability promise into a very public stress test ...
Isomorphic Lab’s proprietary drug-discovery model is a major advance, but scientists developing open-source tools are left ...
As Anthropic releases its most autonomous agents yet, a mounting clash with the military reveals the impossible choice ...
Just days ago the moon traveled directly between Earth and the sun in what was the first solar eclipse of the year, producing ...
To celebrate Scientific American ’s 180th anniversary, we’re publishing jigsaw puzzles to show off some of our most fascinating magazine covers over the years. Take a tour here through the covers so ...
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