Skip to main content

AI Bias Analysis

4 models · Takes ~15 seconds

Phys.org

Image: Australia's cloudy beauty

Image: Australia's cloudy beauty
ShareXFacebook

It's autumn in the Southern Hemisphere, which means it's fog season in the Victorian Alps. NASA's Terra satellite captured this view of morning fog filling valleys in several national parks across the mountains of eastern Victoria in May.

P

Source

Phys.org

Read full article at Phys.org

Opens original article in a new tab

Advertisement

Related Science Stories

The cinema effect: Turning films into a gateway to science
Phys.org

The cinema effect: Turning films into a gateway to science

The sci-fi film Project Hail Mary, currently in theaters, is capturing the attention of both audiences and the scientific community for its science-based content. It manages to engage viewers with complex, cutting-edge topics—from astrophysics to language—without sacrificing entertainment. Yet not all films strike this balance. Many have promoted inaccurate or even misleading scientific ideas, and, thanks to their wide reach, have contributed to shaping distorted public perceptions of science.

Read more →
Why was an Egyptian mummy stuffed with a fragment of Homer's Iliad?
Phys.org

Why was an Egyptian mummy stuffed with a fragment of Homer's Iliad?

Archaeologists have found something unexpected inside a 1,600-year-old Roman-era Egyptian mummy: a fragment of Homer's Iliad. It wasn't placed beside the body, but inside the mummy's abdomen. But the real surprise isn't just where the fragment was found. It's how it got there. To understand, we must go back—to the Iliad itself, and to what it became in the Roman world.

Read more →
ScienceDaily Composite
Science Daily

A rare cancer-fighting plant compound has been decoded

Scientists at UBC Okanagan have uncovered how plants produce mitraphylline, a rare natural compound with promising anti cancer potential. The team identified two enzymes that work together to build the molecule’s unusual twisted structure, solving a mystery that had puzzled researchers for years. Because mitraphylline appears only in tiny amounts in tropical plants like kratom and cat’s claw, the discovery could make it far easier to produce sustainably in the future.

Read more →
Advertisement