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Might Xi and Putin be onto something?
Policy Tracker: Exceptions to State Abortion Bans and Early Gestational Limits 
KFF/The Washington Post Survey of Parents
Synthesia’s AI clones are more expressive than ever. Soon they’ll be able to talk back.

Might Xi and Putin be onto something?

Michelle RobertsDigital health editor, BBC News BBC Organ transplants certainly save lives but having surgery is a big undertaking with significant risks Is it possible to become immortal with the help of organ transplants? That was the unexpected topic of discussion this week between Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin when they…

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KFF/The Washington Post Survey of Parents

This is an early release from a forthcoming KFF/The Washington Post Survey of Parents. Please see the topline and methodology for full details. Full reporting is coming soon. Explore The Washington Post’s journalism: RFK Jr. drives a wedge between red and blue states on vaccines, Sept. 4, 2025 Source link

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Synthesia’s AI clones are more expressive than ever. Soon they’ll be able to talk back.

When Synthesia launched in 2017, its primary purpose was to match AI versions of real human faces—for example, the former footballer David Beckham—with dubbed voices speaking in different languages. A few years later, in 2020, it started giving the companies that signed up for its services the opportunity to make professional-level presentation videos starring either…

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A tiny embryo fold changed the course of evolution

Small fold – big role: A tissue fold known as the cephalic furrow, an evolutionary novelty that forms between the head and the trunk of fly embryos, plays a mechanical role in stabilizing embryonic tissues during the development of the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster. Combining theory and experiment: Researchers integrated computer simulations with their experiments…

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Scientists create biodegradable plastic stronger than PET

The PET-alternative PDCA is biodegradable and has superior physical properties. A Kobe University team of bioengineers engineered E. coli bacteria to produce the compound from glucose at unprecedented levels and without byproducts — and opened up a realm of possibilities for the future of bioengineering. The durability of plastics is both the reason why they…

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