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Life Sciences - 16.04.2025
Bonobos react negatively to inequity
Bonobos refuse to participate when faced with unequal rewards, reinforcing the highly contentious debate about inequity aversion in animals To the point Bonobos show signs of inequity aversion : In two experiments, bonobos were less willing to participate when they received a worse reward than a partner, suggesting they dislike unequal treatment.

Environment - Life Sciences - 16.04.2025
Experiment in Leipzig's floodplain forest: Using tree mortality to support oak regeneration
Experiment in Leipzig’s floodplain forest: Using tree mortality to support oak regeneration
The pedunculate oaks typical of Leipzig's floodplain forest and other German oak forests are struggling to regenerate in the understorey due to a lack of light. One reason for this is the absence of flooding in floodplain forests. In a two-year oak experiment in Leipzig's floodplain forest, researchers from Leipzig University and the German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) found that the current tree dieback - caused by drought and pest outbreaks - combined with the thinning of certain understorey species, can actually support oak regeneration.

Life Sciences - Health - 16.04.2025
Brain areas necessary for reasoning identified
A team of researchers at UCL and UCLH have identified the key brain regions that are essential for logical thinking and problem solving. The findings, published in Brain, help to increase our understanding of how the human brain supports our ability to comprehend, draw conclusions, and deal with new and novel problems - otherwise known as reasoning skills.

Psychology - Health - 16.04.2025
Adding Art to Our Lives Boosts Well-being
Adding Art to Our Lives Boosts Well-being
Researchers identify the benefits of participating in art-viewing activities Simply looking at visual art, visiting a museum, or having art in your hospital room can enhance well-being, particularly repeated engagement, which can increase the meaning we feel in life, according to a new international study led by researchers from the University of Vienna.

Astronomy & Space - Campus - 16.04.2025
The most distant twin of the Milky Way ever observed
The most distant twin of the Milky Way ever observed
An international team led by UNIGE has discovered a massive, Milky Way-like spiral galaxy that formed just 1 billion years after the Big Bang, revealing an unexpectedly mature structure in the An international team led by the University of Geneva has discovered the most distant spiral galaxy candidate known to date.

Environment - 16.04.2025
Experiment in the riparian forest: tree mortality can be used for oak regeneration
Experiment in the riparian forest: tree mortality can be used for oak regeneration
The English oaks typical of the Leipzig riparian forest and other German oak forests can hardly rejuvenate due to a lack of light in the undergrowth. One reason for this is the lack of flooding in alluvial forests. Researchers from Leipzig University and the German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) have discovered in a two-year oak experiment in Leipzig's alluvial forest that the current tree mortality as a result of droughts and the spread of pests can be used in combination with a thinning out of certain species in the undergrowth for oak regeneration.

Psychology - Media - 16.04.2025
Frequent sex is a factor for high relationship satisfaction
Frequent sex is a factor for high relationship satisfaction
" Can a marriage without sex be a happy one? " asked an article in the New York Times Magazine last year. Based on 30 married couples who reported on their relationships in interviews, a journalist put forward the thesis that a sexless married life does not necessarily mean that relationship satisfaction suffers - a surprising finding, as it is generally accepted that a fulfilling sex life is an elementary component of a happy relationship.

Social Sciences - 16.04.2025
New EU Return Directive contradicts research findings
New EU Return Directive contradicts research findings
Fact-check on deportations in Germany published   In March 2025, the European Commission presented an initial draft of a new EU Return Directive to the European Parliament. The policies proposed in the Directive are essentially following the tightening and restrictions that Germany has already practised in recent years to return non-EU nationals.

Health - Art & Design - 16.04.2025
Viewing art can boost wellbeing by giving meaning to life
The simple act of looking at a piece of visual art can boost your wellbeing, a new research study has found, and this benefit can be gained in a hospital setting as well as an art gallery. Artworks which were included in the review include famous pieces such as The Scream by Edvard Munch, The Starry Night by Vincent Van Gogh, and other pieces of modern and contemporary art.

Health - Life Sciences - 16.04.2025
Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency: What protects the one - and not the other?
Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency: What protects the one - and not the other?
Researchers at the MPI of Biochemistry have used spatial Deep Visual Proteomics workflow to reveal why some patients with the hereditary disease alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency remain healthy despite the genetic defect.

Astronomy & Space - 16.04.2025
Rare twist in exoplanet's twin star orbit
Rare twist in exoplanet’s twin star orbit
First time that strong evidence for a 'polar planet' orbiting a stellar pair has been collected Astronomers have discovered a planet that orbits at a 90-degree angle around a rare pair of strange stars - a real-life 'twist' on the fictional twin suns of Star Wars hero Luke Skywalker's home planet of Tatooine.

Environment - Life Sciences - 15.04.2025
Growing wildflowers on disused urban land can damage bee health
Growing wildflowers on disused urban land can damage bee health
Wildflowers growing on land previously used for buildings and factories can accumulate lead, arsenic and other metal contaminants from the soil, which are consumed by pollinators as they feed, a new study has found. Our results should not discourage people from planting wildflowers in towns and cities.

Environment - Paleontology - 15.04.2025
Active Hydrothermal System within the Chicxulub crater helped life recovery after the impact of the Dino-Killing Asteroid
About 66 million years ago, an asteroid slammed into the planet, wiping out all non-avian dinosaurs and about 70 percent of all marine species. The huge crater formed in the Gulf of Mexico functioned as a cradle for recovery of marine life enriching the overlying ocean for at least 700,000 years, according to research published today in Nature Communications .

Life Sciences - 15.04.2025
The brain learns to filter out distracting stimuli over time
The brain learns to filter out distracting stimuli over time
The human brain can learn through experience to filter out disturbing and distracting stimuli - such as a glaring roadside billboard or a flashing banner on the internet. Scientists at Leipzig University and Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam have used electroencephalography (EEG) to show that early visual processing in humans changes with repeated exposure.

Life Sciences - 15.04.2025
Over time, the brain learns to block out disturbing stimuli
Over time, the brain learns to block out disturbing stimuli
The human brain can learn through experience to block out disturbing and distracting stimuli, such as a glaring billboard on the side of the road or a flashing banner on the internet. Researchers at Leipzig University and Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam have discovered with the help of brain wave measurements (EEG) that early visual processing in humans changes through repeated experience.

Physics - Materials Science - 15.04.2025
New method to measure and predict hydrogen bond strength in confined water
New method to measure and predict hydrogen bond strength in confined water
A breakthrough by researchers at The University of Manchester sheds light on one of nature's most elusive forces, with wide-reaching implications for medicine, energy, climate modelling and more. Researchers at The University of Manchester have developed a ground-breaking method to precisely measure the strength of hydrogen bonds in confined water systems, an advance that could transform our understanding of water's role in biology, materials science, and technology.

Environment - History & Archeology - 15.04.2025
New study links wealth inequality and human sustainability across millennia
Wealth inequality has been linked to human sustainability for over 10,000 years. That's according to a new study led by Professor Dan Lawrence from our Archaeology department.

Innovation - 15.04.2025
Current AI Risks More Alarming than Apocalyptic Future Scenarios
Most people generally are more concerned about the immediate risks of artificial intelligence than they are about a theoretical future in which AI threatens humanity. A new study by the University of Zurich reveals that respondents draw clear distinctions between abstract scenarios and specific tangible problems and particularly take the latter very seriously.

Health - Life Sciences - 15.04.2025
Artificial skin from hydrogels
Artificial skin from hydrogels
Growing cells in the laboratory is an art that humans have mastered decades ago. Recreating entire three-dimensional tissues is much more challenging. researchers are developing a new hydrogel-based material that makes it possible to engineer artificial skin tissues, which can serve as living three-dimensional models of human skin for better understanding and treating skin diseases.

Life Sciences - Health - 15.04.2025
How disturbed signaling pathways could promote epileptic seizures
How disturbed signaling pathways could promote epileptic seizures
New insights into dopamine in focal cortical dysplasia: For the first time, a research team in Bonn is systematically investigating the role of the dopamine system in a common form of therapy-resistant epilepsy. Focal cortical dysplasia (FCD) type 2 is a congenital malformation of the cerebral cortex that is often associated with difficult-to-treat epilepsy.
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