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Dr. Michael Blanke | Climate Change and Global Warming | Research Excellence Award

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  Dr. Michael Blanke | Climate Change and Global Warming | Research Excellence Award   Congratulations to Dr. Michael Blanke!   We are delighted to announce that Dr. Michael Blanke from Universität Bonn-INRES-Gartenbau, Germany has been honored with the Research Excellence Award at the New Scientists Awards for his outstanding contributions to Climate Change and Global Warming research. His research excellence exemplifies the impact that dedicated scientists can have in addressing some of the world's most pressing global issues.  Join us in celebrating this remarkable achievement and recognizing his valuable contributions to the scientific community. Visit: newscientists.net Nominate Now : https://c-i.li/RegisterNSC Contact Us: info@newscientists.net New Scientists Awards #researchawards #worldresearchawards #scienceawards #academicawards #InnovativeResearchAward #RenewableEnergy #CleanEnergy #Sustainability #GreenTechnology #EnergyInnovation #ScientificExcellen...
  Congratulations to Dr. Francis Nuetor!  We are proud to celebrate the remarkable achievement of Dr. Francis Nuetor, recipient of the Innovative Research Award in the field of Renewable Energy at the New Scientists Awards. Dr. Nuetor's pioneering contributions to renewable energy research are driving sustainable solutions and shaping a cleaner, more resilient future. His innovative work exemplifies scientific excellence, impactful research, and a strong commitment to advancing green technologies for global benefit. The Innovative Research Award recognizes researchers whose groundbreaking contributions create meaningful progress across academia, industry, and society. Advancing renewable energy innovation for a sustainable tomorrow. Join us in celebrating this outstanding accomplishment and the transformative impact of his research. Visit: newscientists.net Nominate Now : http://newscientists.net/award-nomination/?ecategory=Awards&rcategory=Awardee Contact Us: info@newscie...

16th Edition of New Scientists Awards | 28–29 June 2026 New Scientists Awards Nomination Link: https://newscientists.net/award-nomin... Web Visitors: https://newscientists.net/ For Enquiry: contact@newscientists.net Get Connected Here: ================= Twitter: https://x.com/awards67811 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/afreen202564/ Blogger: https://newscientistsawards.blogspot.... Pinterest: https://in.pinterest.com/scienceawards/ Tumblr: https://www.tumblr.com/newscientistsa... #ScienceFather #scifax #researcherawards #phd #researcher #NewScientistsAwards

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Prof. Xuemei Li | Ecology and Biodiversity | Research Excellence Award Deputy Director, Yangtze River Fisheries Research Institute (YRFRI), Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences | China Prof. Xuemei Li is a highly cited environmental and fisheries scientist with 1,627 Scopus citations, 78 indexed documents, and an h-index of 22, reflecting sustained international research impact. Her work integrates aquatic ecology, fisheries resource assessment, microbial and phytoplankton community assembly, hydroacoustic monitoring, reservoir and lake ecosystem modeling, thermal stress biology, and conservation-driven management strategies. She has led and contributed to multidisciplinary research on fishing bans, eutrophication control, biodiversity recovery, and climate-linked ecosystem responses, with findings informing sustainable aquaculture and freshwater resource policy.

 

Light-Directed System Accelerates Evolution of Complex Protein Functions

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Scientists have developed a novel protein evolution approach dubbed optovolution that uses light to guide the evolution of proteins with dynamic, multi-state, and computational functions based on specific rules. Details of the work are published in a new Cell paper titled “undefined.” The research was led by scientists at the Swiss Federal Technology Institute of Lausanne (EPFL). Over the years, scientists have developed various methods for directed evolution of proteins like enzymes and antibodies that are used in household detergents, medicine, and other industries. The challenge with these existing methods is that they are always strongly active which is inconsistent with how biology naturally works. Signaling proteins, protein “switches,” and protein “logic gates”—proteins that combine multiple inputs to make yes or no decisions—change states over time depending on the need. Thus, if a directed evolution approach only selects for one state, the other important states of a protein ...

AI Models for Protein Function Prediction

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AI protein function prediction is reshaping how laboratories approach protein annotation, hypothesis generation, and translational research. As sequencing technologies continue to outpace experimental characterization, AI protein function prediction provides computational strategies to bridge the gap between sequence data and biological insight. Large-scale genome projects generate millions of uncharacterized protein sequences. Traditional wet-lab validation remains essential but cannot match the scale of sequence expansion. Machine learning models trained on sequence, structure, and functional data now support automated protein function annotation, prioritization, and experimental design across drug discovery, synthetic biology, and clinical research workflows. New Scientists Awards - NOMINATION OPEN NOW! Nomination Link:   https://newscientists.net/award-nomination/?ecategory=Awards&rcategory=Awardee Web Visitors:   newscientists.net For Enquiry:   info@newscientist...

Beyond amyloid plaques: AI reveals hidden chemical changes across the Alzheimer’s brain

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Using cutting-edge laser imaging and AI, researchers mapped the Alzheimer’s brain in unprecedented chemical detail. The results reveal widespread, uneven molecular changes that could reshape how scientists understand and treat the disease.  Researchers at Rice University have produced the first comprehensive, label free molecular atlas of the Alzheimer's brain in an animal model. The work offers a deeper look at how the disease begins and spreads. Alzheimer's claims more lives each year than breast cancer and prostate cancer combined, underscoring the urgency of understanding what drives it. New Scientists Awards - NOMINATION OPEN NOW! Nomination Link:   https://newscientists.net/award-nomination/?ecategory=Awards&rcategory=Awardee Web Visitors:   newscientists.net For Enquiry:   info@newscientists.net #worldresearchawards #researcherawards #academicawards #scienceawards #globalresearchawards #phd #researcher #NewScientistsAwards #NSCAwards #AlzheimersResearch #A...

Scientists turn methane into medicine in stunning breakthrough

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Scientists have unveiled a breakthrough way to turn natural gas—long burned as fuel—into valuable chemical building blocks for medicines and other high-demand products. By designing a clever iron-based catalyst powered by LED light, researchers managed to activate stubborn molecules like methane and transform them into complex compounds, even creating the hormone therapy drug dimestrol directly from methane for the first time. Natural gas is one of the most plentiful energy resources on Earth. It is made mostly of methane, along with ethane and propane. Today, it is primarily burned for heat and electricity, a process that releases greenhouse gases. For years, researchers and industry leaders have tried to find ways to convert these simple hydrocarbons directly into useful chemicals instead of burning them. The challenge is that methane and similar gases are extremely stable and do not react easily, which has limited their use as sustainable raw materials for manufacturing. New Scienti...

Dopamine Surprise Gives Human Movements a Measurable Speed Boost

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Unexpected rewards can make people move faster within a fraction of a second, revealing how closely motivation and movement are linked in the brain. In a joystick-based reaching task, participants accelerated toward targets that offered higher reward probability, and their movements gained an extra burst of speed when a low-probability reward appeared unexpectedly. The timing of this change matched classic dopamine reward-prediction signals, suggesting that movement vigor reflects the brain’s internal value computations. Over time, strings of positive or negative outcomes also shifted overall movement speed, showing that recent experience continuously recalibrates how energetically we act. These findings point to movement as a potential noninvasive marker for tracking dopamine function in conditions such as Parkinson’s disease and depression. New Scientists Awards - NOMINATION OPEN NOW! Nomination Link:   https://newscientists.net/award-nomination/?ecategory=Awards&rcategory=Aw...

Deutsche Telekom and Google Cloud Collaborate for Superior Network Experience with Agentic AI

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Deutsche Telekom, in partnership with Google Cloud, today announced the development and implementation of MINDR (Multi-Agentic Intelligent Network Diagnostics & Remediation), a multi-agentic artificial intelligence (AI) system designed by Deutsche Telekom to enable autonomous diagnostics and operations across complex, multi-domain telecommunications networks. Deutsche Telekom, in partnership with Google Cloud, today announced the development and implementation of MINDR (Multi-Agentic Intelligent Network Diagnostics & Remediation), a multi-agentic artificial intelligence (AI) system designed by Deutsche Telekom to enable autonomous diagnostics and operations across complex, multi-domain telecommunications networks. New Scientists Awards - NOMINATION OPEN NOW! Nomination Link:   https://newscientists.net/award-nomination/?ecategory=Awards&rcategory=Awardee Web Visitors:   newscientists.net For Enquiry:   info@newscientists.net #worldresearchawards #researcherawa...

Expertise Protects Against Cognitive Decline

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Expertise Protects Against Cognitive Decline refers to the well-established neuroscience concept that sustained intellectual engagement and domain-specific mastery enhance cognitive reserve, enabling the brain to compensate for age-related neuropathology and delay clinical manifestations of disorders such as Alzheimer's disease and other dementias. Long-term expertise in fields such as music, mathematics, bilingual communication, medicine, chess, or scientific research promotes neuroplasticity, strengthens synaptic networks, increases gray matter density, and optimizes functional connectivity across prefrontal and hippocampal circuits.  Empirical evidence from longitudinal aging cohorts and neuroimaging studies indicates that individuals with high occupational complexity and sustained learning exhibit slower rates of memory decline, executive dysfunction, and processing-speed deterioration. Mechanistically, expertise enhances neural efficiency, scaffolds alternative compensatory pa...

The hidden reason cancer immunotherapy often fails

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Cancer immunotherapy has been a game-changer, but many tumors still find ways to slip past the immune system. New research reveals a hidden trick: cancer cells can package the immune-blocking protein PD-L1 into tiny particles that circulate through the body and weaken immunotherapy’s impact. Scientists in Japan discovered that a little-known protein, UBL3, controls this process—and surprisingly, common cholesterol-lowering drugs called statins can shut it down. Scientists discovered how cancer cells secretly spread immune-blocking signals using tiny vesicles filled with PD-L1. Even more surprising, widely used statins can disrupt this process, potentially making immunotherapy far more effective. Credit: Shutterstock. New Scientists Awards - NOMINATION OPEN NOW! Nomination Link:   https://newscientists.net/award-nomination/?ecategory=Awards&rcategory=Awardee Web Visitors:   newscientists.net For Enquiry:   info@newscientists.net #worldresearchawards #researcherawards #...

Quantum scientists release ‘manifesto’ opposing the militarization of quantum research

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More than 250 quantum scientists have signed a “manifesto” opposing the use of quantum research for military purposes. The statement – quantum scientists for disarmament – expresses a “deep concern” about the current geopolitical situation and “categorically rejects” the militarization of quantum research or its use in population control and surveillance. The signatories now call for an open debate about the ethical implications of quantum research. While quantum science has the potential to improve many different areas – from sensors and medicine to computing – some are concerned about its applications for military purposes. They includes quantum key distribution and cryptographic networks for communication as well as quantum clocks and sensing for military navigation and positioning. New Scientists Awards - NOMINATION OPEN NOW! Nomination Link:   https://newscientists.net/award-nomination/?ecategory=Awards&rcategory=Awardee Web Visitors:   newscientists.net For Enquiry:...

Simplified Models Reveal Inner Workings of Efficient Binary Neural Networks

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Binary neural networks (BNNs) present a promising avenue for low-complexity and energy-efficient computation, yet their inherent non-linearity hinders interpretability and formal verification. Mohamed Tarraf, Alex Chan, Alex Yakovlev, and Rishad Shafik, all from Newcastle University, address this challenge by introducing a novel Petri net (PN)-based framework to model BNN operations as event-driven processes. This work is significant because it transforms traditionally opaque BNNs into transparent, analysable systems, enabling detailed examination of concurrency, state evolution, and causal dependencies. The researchers construct modular PN blueprints for key BNN components, composing them into a complete system-level model, and rigorously validate this model against a software-based BNN using Workcraft’s automated tools to establish properties such as 1-safeness and deadlock-freeness. Ultimately, this framework facilitates formal reasoning and verification, paving the way for the depl...

Hardware is King: Applied Materials Defies AI Software Slump with Massive Breakout

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While the broader technology sector spent the second week of February 2026 reeling from a "SaaSpocalypse" that wiped billions off the valuations of software giants, Applied Materials (NASDAQ: AMAT) emerged as a beacon of resilience. On Friday, February 13, 2026, shares of the semiconductor equipment powerhouse surged by more than 8.1%, closing at a record $354.91. The rally marked a dramatic technical breakout, decoupling the company from a sharp sell-off in AI-centric software and services companies that have dominated the market narrative for years. The surge came as investors recalibrated their portfolios, shifting capital away from the companies providing AI services—now facing existential disruption and ROI skepticism—and toward the "pick-and-shovel" firms building the physical infrastructure of the digital age. This rotation highlights a growing market consensus: while the ultimate winners of the AI software wars remain unclear, the demand for the advanced har...

Figure Tests Future of Trading With Blockchain Stock Launch

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The company, which is a blockchain-native capital marketplace for tokenized assets, said in a November press release that it had filed a registration statement with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) regarding the proposed offering of its Blockchain Stock. Figure said in the November release that the Blockchain Stock would be a blockchain-native class of equity securities, would trade on the company’s alternative trading system and would be convertible into shares of Figure’s Class A Common Stock on a one-for-one basis. The company added that the Blockchain Stock would use a blockchain-only securities stack, with the security being issued on the Provenance Blockchain, trading on Figure’s non-custodial alternative trading system and settling in self-custody user wallets. New Scientists Awards Nomination Link:   https://newscientists.net/award-nomination/?ecategory=Awards&rcategory=Awardee Web Visitors:   newscientists.net For Enquiry:   info@newscientists.net...

Scientists discover protein that rejuvenates aging brain cells

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A newly identified protein may hold the key to rejuvenating aging brain cells. Researchers found that boosting DMTF1 can restore the ability of neural stem cells to regenerate, even when age-related damage has set in. Without it, these cells struggle to renew and support memory and learning. The findings raise hopes for treatments that could slow or even reverse aspects of brain aging. Neural stem cells are responsible for generating new neurons, which play an essential role in learning and memory. As people age, these stem cells gradually lose their ability to renew themselves, contributing to cognitive decline. New Scientists Awards Nomination Link:   https://newscientists.net/award-nomination/?ecategory=Awards&rcategory=Awardee Web Visitors:   newscientists.net For Enquiry:   info@newscientists.net #worldresearchawards #researcherawards #academicawards #scienceawards #globalresearchawards #phd #researcher #NewScientistsAwards #NSCAwards #BrainResearch #Neuroscience...

The Velocity Engine: Synchronizing Automation Testing with Modern DevOps

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Traditionally, testing was the final gate code had to pass before reaching production. This created a friction-filled relationship between developers (who wanted to ship) and QA (who wanted to protect). Modern Automation Testing flips this script. By embedding tests directly into the developer’s local environment and the shared repository, testing becomes a collaborative tool. When scripts are written to validate functionality, security, and performance automatically, developers receive immediate feedback. This “Shift-Left” approach ensures that bugs are caught while the code is still fresh in the engineer’s mind, reducing the cost of remediation by up to 10x compared to finding bugs in late-stage production. New Scientists Awards Nomination Link:   https://newscientists.net/award-nomination/?ecategory=Awards&rcategory=Awardee Web Visitors:   newscientists.net For Enquiry:   info@newscientists.net #worldresearchawards #researcherawards #academicawards #scienceawards #...

AI-driven audience clustering in sport media: a human–computer interaction approach using ‘CoPE-DEC’

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AI-driven audience clustering in sports media leverages machine learning and human–computer interaction to segment fans based on behavior, preferences, and engagement. Using the CoPE-DEC framework, researchers combine computational profiling with participatory design and ethical considerations to enhance personalization, decision-making, and user experience while preserving transparency, privacy, and fairness. New Scientists Awards Nomination Link:   https://newscientists.net/award-nomination/?ecategory=Awards&rcategory=Awardee Web Visitors:   newscientists.net For Enquiry:   info@newscientists.net #worldresearchawards #researcherawards #academicawards #scienceawards #globalresearchawards #phd #researcher #NewScientistsAwards #NSCAwards #SportsAnalytics #AI #AudienceClustering #SportsMedia #HCI #MachineLearning #CoPEDec #FanEngagement #Personalization #DataEthics #UserExperience #DigitalMedia #BigData #HumanCenteredAI #Innovation

Preimplantation Genetic Testing Market Analysis: Competitive Landscape and Future Opportunities • Illumina • Thermo Fisher Scientific

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Worldwide Market Reports has recently published an in-depth research study titled "Preimplantation Genetic Testing Market Size and Forecast 2026-2033: Analysis by Manufacturers, Key Regions, Product Types, and Applications." The report is developed using a robust blend of primary and secondary research methodologies, ensuring accuracy, reliability, and comprehensive market coverage. Leveraging historical data and forward-looking projections, the study presents a detailed evaluation of the Preimplantation Genetic Testing market growth, analyzing trends in both value and volume throughout the forecast period. It offers critical insights into major market drivers, growth opportunities, restraints, and challenges shaping the overall industry landscape. New Scientists Awards Nomination Link:   https://newscientists.net/award-nomination/?ecategory=Awards&rcategory=Awardee Web Visitors:   newscientists.net For Enquiry:   info@newscientists.net #worldresearchawards #researche...