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A new series for the Health and Science section aims to make complex topics easy to dissect, and maybe even help people ‘fall ...
Twenty years ago, cognitive psychologist Elizabeth Spelke took a strong position in an ongoing public debate. "There are no ...
A story of bowling pins, patterns and medical miracles. In the world of taxicab geometry, even the Pythagorean theorem takes a back seat. Trying to fit it all in? There’s a trick to it, even in 24 ...
The strength of certain neural connections can predict how well someone can learn math, and mildly electrically stimulating ...
On June 17, 2025, in Plymouth, United Kingdom, @jorgp68 shared a video during an outdoor festive moment on the Barbican. In ...
Did you know there are more ways to shuffle a deck of cards than there are atoms in the universe? Seems crazy, but it's true. Today The Why Files covers amazing math facts (and tricks) that will ...
A study suggests that carefully controlled electrical stimulation of the brain may improve math skills, most significantly in people with weaker connections in a specific part of the brain.
Course content This course is equivalent with ECON3120 - Mathematics 2: Calculus and Linear Algebra Among other things, the course includes elementary linear algebra, the solution of equation systems, ...
In this paper, we study irreducible modules over the mirror Heisenberg–Virasoro algebra D 𝔇, which is the semi-direct product of the Virasoro algebra and the twisted Heisenberg algebra. We classify ...