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Month: May 2026

Agriculture

Drones match farm planning effectiveness of more expensive tech, study finds

May 7, 2026 Phys.org

Environmental scientists and water resource managers need precise, high-resolution maps to reveal areas that farmers should avoid when planting crops, to limit polluting waters with phosphorus from fertilizer or manure. Making those maps has depended […]

Politics

Brexit did not just shake Britain—it sent financial shockwaves across Europe, research indicates

May 7, 2026 Phys.org

Brexit sent waves of financial volatility through European markets, reshaping how risk traveled between countries and exposing how tightly connected the continent’s financial systems had become, according to new research from the University of Surrey […]

Economy

Construction sector adapts to global shocks faster than expected

May 7, 2026 Phys.org

Despite major global disruptions, new research published in the International Journal of Production Economics, shows Australia’s construction sector has adapted faster than expected, driven by rapid adoption of digital tools and more resilient ways of […]

Economy

Properly crediting employees for their ideas is key to building a strong workplace culture, research finds

May 7, 2026 Phys.org

Making sure that employees are properly credited for their ideas can go a long way toward improving workplace culture, a University of Toronto Scarborough study has found.This article was originally published here

Agriculture

An experiment shows that yellow trout can grow larger than the wild strain

May 6, 2026 Phys.org

An experiment conducted in the state of São Paulo, Brazil, has concluded that yellow trout can grow larger than the wild strain, which is the most commonly farmed phenotype of rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). The […]

Agriculture

Cool beans, smart roots: Special cell helps seedlings survive drought battered and nutrient poor soils

May 6, 2026 Phys.org

Researchers have identified a previously unknown cell type hidden on the roots of common beans, a microscopic survival mechanism that could inform the development of more climate-resilient crops and reduce fertilizer dependence.This article was originally […]

Politics

Online echo chambers can arise even without algorithmic nudges or seeking like-minded people

May 6, 2026 Phys.org

A new study of online communities suggests that their interaction dynamics can amplify small, local imbalances in opinions, rapidly turning initially mixed-opinion communities into highly-polarized ones—even without the algorithms and homogeneity-seeking behaviors typically blamed for […]

Agriculture

Fewer insects, fewer nutritious crops: Pollinator decline puts human health at risk

May 6, 2026 Phys.org

Biodiversity loss is directly threatening human health and welfare, according to new research led by the University of Bristol. The study, published in Nature reveals, for the first time, how the decline of insect pollinators […]

Politics

Colonialism and the role of science in the history of Lake Malawi’s fisheries

May 5, 2026 Phys.org

Many scholars have studied the effects of colonial management on terrestrial resources, but what about the effect of colonialism on bodies of water? A new article in Isis: A Journal of the History of Science […]

Politics

Red tape and regulations: A powerful weapon in a new economic reality

May 5, 2026 Phys.org

The global financial order has entered a new, shifting and disruptive era of nationalism and these changes lay bare the difference between the haves and have nots, according to a new study by Charles Darwin […]

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They look like harmless game features, but these design tricks quietly reshape how young players spend money

Governments may shape what AI chatbots say by shaping the web they learn from

AI content moderation takes a lesson from economics

‘News will find me’ mindset makes people trust algorithms and online networks

No ‘meaningful’ shift from social media sites after Australia teen ban: govt report

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More on Retail

Wall design centers experience of deaf and hard-of-hearing individuals

Humans are bad at making complex decisions. AI can call them out

From AirTags to AI nudification: The growing toolkit of technology‑facilitated abuse

The EU’s AI Act could indirectly regulate emerging neurotechnologies

How tarot readers are using AI, and what it says about our growing reliance on chatbots

GPS data reveal why pedestrians in Phnom Penh rarely walk the shortest route

Human-like robot voices boost customer support after mistakes, five experiments show

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