Stephano forte from the university of milan, talking with lizzie gibney to find out more about the protons charmed life. Do you think that your findings are going to be controversial at all? That good question. Because some people say that machine learning is a black box. Yo don't really know what's going in. In the show notes, coming up, we'll be hearing why taxing mental tasks can make us feel red.
00:47 Evidence of a proton’s charm
For decades, scientists have debated whether protons have ‘intrinsic charm’, meaning they contain elementary particles known as charm quarks. Now, using machine learning to comb through huge amounts of experimental data, a team have shown evidence that the charm quark can be found within a proton, which may have important ramifications in the search for new physics.
Research article: The NNPDF Collaboration
News and Views: Evidence at last that the proton has intrinsic charm
11:26 Research Highlights
How sea sponges ‘sneeze’ to clean their filters, and why bonobos’ infantile behaviour helps them receive consolation after conflict.
Research Highlight: How a sponge ‘sneezes’ mucus: against the flow
Research Highlight: Bonobo apes pout and throw tantrums — and gain sympathy
13:52 Briefing Chat
We discuss some highlights from the Nature Briefing. This time, the repeated evolution of the crab body-shape, and why demanding work can lead to mental fatigue.
Discover: Evolution Only Thinks About One Thing, and It’s Crabs
Nature News: Why thinking hard makes us feel tired
Subscribe to Nature Briefing, an unmissable daily round-up of science news, opinion and analysis free in your inbox every weekday.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.