By Jason Arunn Murugesu A web constructed from synthetic spider silkLee et al., Sci. Robot. Material scientists have made artificial spider webs that attract objects and shake off water, just like the real thing. They hope that the material could one day be used to help robots self-clean. Won Jun Song at Seoul National University…
News24 will allow readers to make comments below articles when it launches digital subscriptions in August.The new commenting platform will make use of artificial intelligence to moderate comments.It will not allow hate speech, personal attacks, vulgarity, commercial promotion, false personas, spam or incoherence to be published.News24 will reintroduce comments below articles when our digital subscription…
Please complete security verification This request seems a bit unusual, so we need to confirm that you're human. Please press and hold the button until it turns completely green. Thank you for your cooperation! Press and hold the button If you believe this is an error, please contact our support team. 185.149.70.50 : bfea94ca-615c-491f-a269-fc50ae5c
You don't have permission to access "http://www.medpagetoday.com/pediatrics/generalpediatrics/117946" on this server. Reference #18.e0d7ce17.1760490107.7be53e73 https://errors.edgesuite.net/18.e0d7ce17.1760490107.7be53e73
5 min read HEALTH SECRETARY ROBERT F. Kennedy Jr.’s previous go-to scapegoat for autism was vaccines. Now, it’s Tylenol and circumcision. Yes, really. In a Cabinet meeting on October 9th, Kennedy—who is neither a medical doctor nor an autism researcher—reignited a controversial, long-debunked claim that boys who undergo circumcision are “twice as likely” to be