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Today:
Beethoven's DNA Reveals a Surprise 200 Years Later

NEWS | 03 June 2026
On a stormy Monday in March, 1827, the German composer Ludwig van Beethoven passed away after a protracted illness. The primary cause of that hearing loss has never been known, not even to his personal physician Dr Johann Adam Schmidt. It wasn't just hearing loss the composer had to deal with in his adult life. And just what was behind his gut pains and hearing loss? Given the team was inspired by Beethoven's desire for the world to understand his hearing loss, it's an unfortunate outcome.

Top Stories:
A Hidden Virus Found in Gut Bacteria Is Linked to Colorectal Cancer

NEWS | 03 June 2026
"We have discovered a virus that has not previously been described and which appears to be closely linked to the bacteria we find in patients with colorectal cancer," says Damgaard. Using genetic sequencing, the researchers analyzed the gut bacteria of cancer patients in a large Danish population study. People with colorectal cancer were twice as likely to have detectable levels of the bacteriophage in their gut bacteria, the data showed. Around 80 percent of colorectal cancer risk has been assigned to environmental factors, including gut bacteria composition. With further research, stool sample scans could be developed to look for this B. fragilis virus, for example.

World:
Growing 'Cancer Crisis' Requires Millions More Healthcare Workers, Report Warns

NEWS | 03 June 2026
Based on the current trends, there will be 35.3 million cases of cancer diagnosed annually by 2050, and 18.5 million deaths. According to a new report commissioned by The Lancet Oncology, the cancer workforce will be running 100 million people short by 2050. By 2050, the global cancer workforce will fall short by about 100 million staff needed to cope with these rising cancer rates, the report states. "Rather than cancer type or biological factors, the most important determinant of cancer survival for many patients is therefore the country in which they receive diagnosis and treatment." A global cancer workforce registry – which currently doesn't exist – would help inform training, hiring, and resource allocation.

Current Events:
Feeling Tired After Vivid Dreams? Science Says Something Else Is to Blame

NEWS | 03 June 2026
Most dreaming occurs during rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, which makes up 20–25% of our total sleep time. REM sleep dreams appear to unfold roughly in real time. On top of that, we mostly remember dreams we actually woke up during. Someone who was sure they dreamed all night probably had a completely normal night of REM sleep. Waking from REM sleep is also harder on the body than waking from lighter stages.

News Flash:
AI Finds Potential Ozempic Side Effects Hidden in an Unexpected Data Source

NEWS | 03 June 2026
A new AI-assisted analysis now suggests that the 'front page of the internet' could help researchers spot potential side effects of GLP-1drugs used to manage weight and diabetes, such as Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro, and Zepbound. Clinical trials are the gold standard, but by design, they are slow," says computer and information scientist Sharath Chandra Guntuku. This kind of large-scale data capture and interrogation is made possible by the latest AI models. That's no easy task, given the volume of text and the variety of ways people might talk about GLP-1 drugs and their side effects. While these treatments are associated with significant benefits in weight loss and diabetes management, research is ongoing into other potential consequences of GLP-1 use.

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Remote Monitoring App

SPONSORED | 03 June 2026
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Latest:
The World's First Nuclear Waste Tomb Is Nearly Ready to Open

NEWS | 03 June 2026
The doors slide open, revealing the entrance to what is expected to be the world's first permanent repository for radioactive spent nuclear fuel. Nuclear waste management company Posiva began building the site in 2004, with the cost now estimated at one billion euros ($1.16 billion US). Above ground, the spent nuclear fuel will be encapsulated in highly corrosion-resistant copper canisters. "Before the legal change in 1994, the spent nuclear fuel was exported to, for example, Russia," she said. How the spent nuclear fuel from future SMRs would be managed "has not been decided yet," Multala said.

Breaking:
One Common Food Can Fuel Your Workouts And Aid Recovery. Here's The Science.

NEWS | 03 June 2026
Honey has been used by humans as a natural sweetener and energy source to sustain work and physical performance for thousands of years. These carbs provide a rapid and accessible source of energy, which is particularly useful during exercise when the body needs fuel quickly. Consuming carbohydrates before or during exercise ensures energy is available, allowing us to sustain exercise for longer. This science is also behind why many sports drinks and energy gels contain multiple carbohydrate sources to maximise fuelling efficiency. This means honey may reduce muscle soreness and improve recovery, offering more than just a source of energy.

Trending:
Physicists Just Achieved 'Perfect Randomness' For The First Time Ever

NEWS | 03 June 2026
One of the hardest things to do in physics is to generate true, provably unpredictable randomness. If a code is not perfectly random, it's easier for attackers to guess. Previous quantum random-number generators could produce highly random outputs, but they still relied on trusted hardware and perfectly random starting conditions. The ETH Zurich team instead demonstrated something called randomness amplification, deliberately starting with imperfect randomness – taking randomness that may contain subtle flaws or biases and transforming it into randomness that can be certified as perfectly unpredictable. The result is a system capable of generating certifiably perfect randomness, even when starting with flawed or imperfect randomness.

This Just In:
Women's Dementia Risk May Be Shaped by These Key Factors, Study Finds

NEWS | 03 June 2026
Some risk factors seem to hit women's cognition harder than men's, and accruing multiple risk factors over a lifetime seems to worsen women's brain function more so than men's. "Looking beyond which risk factors are most common, we found that some have a disproportionately larger impact on women's cognition," says Fitzhugh. Given their links to cognitive performance, it's possible these factors may be especially important to investigate in women's dementia risk. "Targeting only the most prevalent risk factors within each sex may overlook certain risk factors that more markedly influence cognitive decline." Related: One Vital Bodily Function Could Link Many Dementia Risk Factors"These differences highlight the importance of considering sex as a key variable in dementia research," says Pa.

Today:
Thousands of Brain Scans Reveal A Worrying Consequence of Night Shifts

NEWS | 03 June 2026
Night shift work is not for the weak. Neuroscientists in Singapore have now found evidence that shift work is tied to brain volume losses in key parts of the brain. If shift work is stopped, however, those reductions are partially recovered within two and a half years, on average. A secondary analysis revealed a negative correlation between volume loss and cognitive performance: Increasing volume loss was associated with poorer performance on some, but not all, cognitive tests. What's more, they are involved in many of the symptoms of shift work, like poorer emotional regulation and memory performance.

Top Stories:
Human Brain Cells Grown on a Chip Level Up to Play 'Doom'

NEWS | 03 June 2026
Australian researchers have trained lab-grown brain cells on a silicon computer chip to play the nineties shooter game "Doom" and say they are just scratching the surface of what the neurons could be capable of doing. Each so-called "biological computer" contains around 200,000 living human brain cells, grown from stem cells that were harvested from blood donations. Having mastered the simple computer game "Pong", where a paddle is moved up and down to send a ball across a screen, the brain cells have moved on to bigger things. The researchers converted the digital environment in "Doom" into patterns of electrical signals the neurons on the chip could understand. Kagan describes the CL1 chip as "a more sustainable and more powerful form of intelligence".

World:
Scientists Find Cosmic 'Rosetta Stone' To Decode Baffling Signals From Deep Space

NEWS | 03 June 2026
To date, around a dozen of these long-period radio transients (LPTs) have been detected from diverse corners of the galaxy, leaving scientists baffled. Now, we've been able to show that the source for one of these transients comes from a white dwarf actively pulling material from a companion star." That includes both radio and X-ray emission, a white dwarf and a binary companion, strong magnetic activity, orbital motion, and accretion – the gravitational transfer of material onto the white dwarf. Every orbit, the white dwarf pulls material from its red dwarf companion star, which is funneled by the white dwarf's magnetic field onto its surface. As the material crashes onto the white dwarf, it heats to millions of degrees and emits high-energy radiation – that's the source of the X-ray signal.

Current Events:
A Sea Cucumber's Amputated Tissue Refuses To Die. Could It Live Forever?

NEWS | 03 June 2026
But the humble sea cucumber has a truly unique longevity trick. Scientists in Canada have now discovered a sea cucumber species with tissue that may live 'indefinitely'. When scientists amputated bits of a scarlet sea cucumber (Psolus fabricii), the tissues refused to die. Like many lizards on land, the sea cucumber species, P. fabricii, is a bit of a klutz in the ocean. "Natural seawater is just about the most microbially diverse, least clean approach we could take experimentally," says Sipler.

News Flash:
US Homes Shake as Meteor Explodes With Force of 300 Tons of TNT

NEWS | 03 June 2026
A meteor crashing toward Earth exploded over the northeastern United States on Saturday, NASA said, setting off booms that echoed over the region with a blast equivalent to 300 tons of TNT. "This fireball was not associated with any currently active meteor shower, but it was a natural object and not a re-entry of space debris or a satellite," she said. "The energy released at breakup is estimated to be equivalent to about 300 tons of TNT, which accounts for the loud booms." The house-sized space rock blew apart 14 miles above the ground, releasing a blast equivalent to 440,000 tons of TNT, NASA said. Related: Watch: Fireball Captured on Video Streaking Over The USThe explosion blew out windows over 200 square miles (518 square kilometers), injuring more than 1,600 people, mostly due to broken glass.