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Articles by Phys.org

Economy

Arrival of boll weevils in U.S. South brought long-term benefits for Black sons born afterward

November 6, 2025 Phys.org

Black–white inequality declined during much of the 20th century, as measured by wages and intergenerational mobility. Scholars have attributed this to a variety of reasons, most notably Black migration and increases in Black people’s education […]

Biotech

The enzyme that doesn’t act like one: NUDT5 controls DNA building block production through structure, not catalysis

November 6, 2025 Phys.org

Inside every cell, a finely tuned metabolic network determines when to build, recycle, or stop producing essential molecules. A central part of this network is folate metabolism, a process that provides vital chemical units for […]

No Picture
Politics

A brief history of congressional oversight, from Revolutionary War financing to Pam Bondi

November 6, 2025 Phys.org

Routine congressional oversight hearings usually don’t make headlines. Historically, these often low-key events have been the sorts of things you catch only on C-SPAN – procedural, polite and largely ignored outside the Beltway.This article was […]

Biotech

Creating better tools to read our DNA’s hidden instructions

November 6, 2025 Phys.org

DNA isn’t just a long string of genetic code, but an intricate 3D structure folded inside each cell. That means the tools used to study DNA need to be just as sophisticated—able to read not […]

Economy

Competing rivals can become powerful partners in global markets

November 6, 2025 Phys.org

In an era of geopolitical tensions and fragile supply chains, firms are seeking new ways to remain competitive and resilient. One such approach is coopetition, a strategic relationship in which companies cooperate and compete at […]

Politics

Older adults share more political misinformation. Here’s why.

November 6, 2025 Phys.org

Adults aged 55 and older are significantly more likely to share political misinformation than younger social media users. And it’s not because they’re unable to discern fake news from real news, according to new University […]

Politics

Researchers unite to frame deportations as a national health crisis

November 6, 2025 Phys.org

Current U.S. immigration enforcement and deportation policies are producing widespread harm to physical and mental health, with family separation and the specters of fear and intimidation affecting the well-being of immigrant and non-immigrant communities.This article […]

Biotech

Growing transgenic plants in weeks instead of months by hijacking a plant’s natural regeneration abilities

November 6, 2025 Phys.org

Plant biologists have developed a method for growing transgenic and gene-edited plants that cuts the slow and expensive process down from months to weeks.This article was originally published here

Economy

AI can help the government spend billions better. But humans have to be in charge

November 6, 2025 Phys.org

The New Zealand government spends about NZ$51.5 billion each year—around 20% of GDP—on goods, services and infrastructure from third-party suppliers. It’s a lot, but how that money is spent matters as much as the amount.This […]

Biotech

AI-designed antibodies created from scratch

November 6, 2025 Phys.org

Research led by the University of Washington reports on an AI-guided method that designs epitope-specific antibodies and confirms atomically precise binding using high-resolution molecular imaging, then strengthens those designs so the antibodies latch on much […]

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