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Phys.org Bias Rating

AI-powered media bias analysis by Daily Composite

out of 5.0
Unrated

Based on analysis of recent Phys.org articles using Claude, GPT-4o, Gemini, and Grok. Scores reflect framing and presentation, not factual accuracy.

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Is Phys.org Biased?

According to Daily Composite AI analysis of recent Phys.org articles, the outlet scores pending — placing it in the Unrated category.

This rating is generated by four independent AI models (Claude, GPT-4o, Gemini, and Grok) analyzing word choice, framing, sources cited, and emotional language in recent articles. The consensus score reduces single-model bias.

Recent Phys.org Articles

Ancient alphabets, new insights: Researchers uncover hidden links among the letters
Phys.org

Ancient alphabets, new insights: Researchers uncover hidden links among the letters

With artificial intelligence (AI) as an essential tool, San Diego State University researchers have discovered surprising similarities among ancient writing systems from Africa and the Caucasus region of Eurasia. Their study suggests that the Armenian alphabet may be more closely related in structure to the ancient Ethiopic writing system than linguists and historians previously thought. The paper is published in the journal Digital Scholarship in the Humanities.

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Binding to RNA is not enough—changing its shape is what makes a drug work, study reveals
Phys.org

Binding to RNA is not enough—changing its shape is what makes a drug work, study reveals

Ribonucleic acids (RNAs) serve as messengers between DNA and protein production, and perform a wide variety of regulatory functions across different cellular processes. This makes them an interesting target for drug designers. Molecular genetics researcher Danny Incarnato (University of Groningen) studies how small-molecule drugs could interfere with RNA structure and function. In a new paper published on March 23 in the journal Nature Communications, he shows that small molecules that bind to R

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A mass mating event in the lab reveals how yeast cells choose partners
Phys.org

A mass mating event in the lab reveals how yeast cells choose partners

While humans often struggle to find a partner who is both physically attractive and a reliable co-parent, yeast may already have cracked the formula for the perfect match. When choosing mates, these single-celled organisms tend to pick partners that may increase the chances of their offspring's success, according to a new study by scientists at the Weizmann Institute of Science, published in Cell Reports.

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ZTF discovers a new mass-transferring brown dwarf binary system
Phys.org

ZTF discovers a new mass-transferring brown dwarf binary system

Astronomers from the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) and elsewhere report the discovery of a binary system consisting of two brown dwarfs undergoing stable mass transfer. The detection of the system, designated ZTF J1239+8347, was made with the Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF) and is detailed in a paper published March 18 in The Astrophysical Journal Letters.

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Who do you think you are? What DNA tests reveal—and what they don't
Phys.org

Who do you think you are? What DNA tests reveal—and what they don't

For more than 40 years, the Golden State Killer haunted California. A serial rapist and murderer active in the 1970s and '80s, he eluded detectives for decades. By 2018, hope of identifying him was fading, until a woman—curious about her ancestry—spat into a plastic tube and mailed it to a genealogy company.

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