The proof, known to be so hard that a mathematician once offered 10 martinis to whoever could figure it out, uses number ...
Visual content depicting climate activists emphasizes emotion and disruption, contrasting with the rational, data-driven ...
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Crows and monkeys show mental shortcuts when judging numbers
In a recently published, PNAS study, professor Andreas Neider and his team found that crows and rhesus macaques take mental shortcuts.
Digital anthropologist Dr Payal Arora, Professor of Inclusive AI Cultures at Utrecht University, speaks to Ahram Online about ...
Q3 2025 Earnings Call October 29, 2025 5:00 PM EDTCompany ParticipantsRichard Cathcart - Head of Investor RelationsMartin de ...
The association representing academic staff at McGill passed a resolution calling on the university to end its partnerships with Israeli academic institutions. Here's a look at what that means and why ...
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How 2022 Hybrid Cars Are Holding Up In The 2025 Used Market
The 2025 used market shows surprising resilience for 2022 hybrids. We break down prices, resale trends, and why demand ...
America once built supercars so wild they made Ferraris sweat - then forgot them faster than a C4 Corvette owner forgets ...
Sheikh Abubakar Mahmud Gumi (1924 –1992) was shocked when he got to Mecca for the first time in 1955 and discovered that the city had no streetlights. Sheikh Gumi was an Islamic scholar and Grand ...
From losing passports to fearing public transit or missing out, travelers share their most irrational anxieties.
Two mathematicians have proved that a straightforward question—how hard is it to untie a knot?—has a complicated answer.
A new collection of research papers examines how humans conceptualize numbers and the numeral systems we’ve build around them ...
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