It was previously thought that children younger than 7 couldn’t find efficient solutions to complex problems, but new research suggests that much earlier, children can happen upon known sorting algorithms used by computer scientists
Why Our Brains, Our Selves won the Royal Society science book prize
Sandra Knapp, chair of the judging panel for the 2025 Royal Society Trivedi Science Book Prize, explains why neurologist Masud Husain’s collection of case studies is such an enlightening, compassionate book
Read an extract from Our Brains, Our Selves by Masud Husain
In this passage from Our Brains, Our Selves, winner of the Royal Society Trivedi Science Book Prize, neuroscientist Masud Husain recounts how novelist Marcel Proust became convinced, wrongly, that he’d had a stroke
Our verdict on ‘The Dispossessed’: A tricky but rewarding novel
The New Scientist Book Club has just finished reading Ursula K. Le Guin’s The Dispossessed. Most of our members enjoyed it, even if the sheer volume of ideas in the book made it a challenging read
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Endearing photos of bats show clever adaptations like long tongues
In his book The Genius Bat, ecologist Yossi Yovel explains why these mammals are a vital part of ecosystems, pollinating plants and keeping insect populations in check
Exploring PMS is a great idea, but The Period Brain can be simplistic
Premenstrual syndrome and its symptoms is neglected by science, so Sarah Hill’s new book is welcome. But it needs more on genetics, not just lifestyle changes, says Alexandra Thompson
Should we worry AI will create deadly bioweapons? Not yet, but one day
AI tools are being used to design proteins and even viruses, leading to fears these could eventually be used to evade bioweapon controls
Antarctica may have crossed a tipping point that leads to rising seas
Scientists are beginning to understand the sudden loss of sea ice in Antarctica – and there is growing evidence that it represents a permanent shift with potentially catastrophic consequences
Why ‘beauty factories’ could solve two massive cosmological mysteries
Facilities that make particles called B mesons may seem obscure, but they could help explain why there is more matter than antimatter and what dark matter is, says Chanda Prescod-Weinstein
Rogue planet gains 6 billion tonnes per second in record growth spurt
A free-floating planet has been seen devouring astonishing amounts of matter, hinting that stars and planets are more alike than we thought