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AutoSci: A Memory-Centric Agentic System for the Full Scientific Research Lifecycle

Announce Type: new Abstract: Scientific research has traditionally been human-intensive, requiring researchers to coordinate literature, ideas, experiments, manuscripts, and review responses across long project cycles. The rise of LLM-based scientific agents creates an opportunity to automate this process. Such a system must support the full research lifecycle, maintain structured persistent memory across projects, and improve its own research procedures over time.

arXiv CS 9d ago

A Critical Assessment of the Brain Criticality Hypothesis

arXiv:2604.21071v3 Announce Type: replace Abstract: A major unresolved question in Neuroscience is: What is the origin of the observed scale-invariant correlations in neural activity? Many researchers support the ``criticality hypothesis,'' which proposes that the brain operates near criticality, optimizing various information processing functions. However, the nature and behavior of criticality in cortical systems are still unclear.

arXiv Physics 8d ago

Introducing multiplex semantic networks as multifaceted representations of creative associative knowledge across multilingual samples

arXiv:2606.09403v1 Announce Type: new Abstract: Creativity is a complex cognitive ability that relies on knowledge organisation and retrieval from semantic memory. Yet most research uses a single task to measure it, capturing only a fraction of this complexity. This study investigates multiplex networks - layered semantic networks obtained from six cognitive tasks - as a more comprehensive approach to modelling the associative knowledge underlying creativity.

arXiv CS 1d ago

Fear of recurrence: How immune memory helps cancer survivors face their worst nightmare

Every year the world observes National Cancer Survivors Month in June, celebrating the growing number of people who have successfully completed cancer treatment and are building lives beyond their diagnosis. For many survivors, however, the end of treatment does not always bring complete peace of mind. Even years later, routine scans, follow-up appointments or unexplained aches can revive a lingering question: What if the cancer comes back?

Times of India 23h ago

1-Bit Bonsai Image 4B Image Generation for Local Devices

Introducing 1-bit and Ternary Bonsai Image 4B: Image Generation for Local Devices Today we’re releasing Bonsai Image 4B, a family of compact image-generation models designed to run high-quality diffusion inference on local hardware: from laptops to phones. Bonsai Image 4B comes in two variants: - 1-bit Bonsai Image 4B uses binary {−1, +1} transformer weights with an FP16 group-wise scaling factor, giving 1.125 effective bits per weight. It targets maximum compression and is the right fit...

Hacker News 9d ago

Short videos may hinder learning by fragmenting attention and memory, study finds

June 4, 2026 feature Short videos may hinder learning by fragmenting attention and memory, study finds Ingrid Fadelli Author Stephanie Baum Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor Recent technological advances and the introduction of new digital media platforms have dramatically changed how people learn and source information about topics that interest them. Some recent studies have found that while browsing online or scrolling down social media platforms, users tend to spend under...

Phys.org 5d ago

You could get some of the benefits of sleep without having to nod off

It may one day be possible to reap some of the benefits of sleep without ever closing our eyes. Stimulating specific brain activity in awake mice led to some of the same effects as deep sleep, including a boost in memory. “It should be possible, at least in theory and to some extent, to replicate these results in our species,” says Vladyslav Vyazovskiy at the University of Oxford, who wasn’t involved in the research.

New Scientist 1d ago

Parental cooperation with kindergarten is most important way to support preschoolers' academic skills, study finds

Parental cooperation with kindergarten is most important way to support preschoolers' academic skills, study finds Gaby Clark Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor Research into the academic skills of five-year-old children shows that parents' beliefs and cooperation with their kindergarten are more important than the abundance of parental activities at home in supporting the academic skills of five-year-old children. The study, conducted by Anne-Mai Meesak, Doctorate in Educational...

Phys.org 5d ago

Popular joint supplement glucosamine linked to faster Alzheimer’s progression

Popular joint supplement glucosamine linked to faster Alzheimer’s progression - Date: - June 10, 2026 - Source: - UF Health - Summary: - A major study suggests glucosamine, a popular supplement for joint pain, could be linked to faster progression from mild cognitive impairment to Alzheimer’s disease. Researchers found a 25% higher likelihood of developing dementia among glucosamine users and uncovered biological clues that may explain why. - Share: A widely used supplement marketed for...

Science Daily 5h ago

Nitric oxide overload jams plant immune signals, researchers find

Nitric oxide overload jams plant immune signals, researchers find Gaby Clark Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor A new study from the University of Kentucky Martin-Gatton College of Agriculture, Food and Environment (CAFE) helps explain how plants can lose track of their own disease warnings. Plants do not have blood, nerves or immune cells like people do, but they still have ways to protect themselves. When one leaf is attacked by a pathogen, the plant can send warning signals to...

Phys.org 6d ago