Digital tools allow archaeologists to identify similarities between fragments and artifacts and potentially recover previously unknown parts of their stories.
When you go for a walk, how does your brain know the difference between a parked car and a moving car? This seemingly simple ...
Motion created by eye movements helps the brain judge distance and movement in 3D space, offering new insights into how stable vision works.
Researchers at Science Tokyo have developed a neural inverse rendering method that accurately reconstructs the three-dimensional (3D) shapes of moving objects using only three standard projection ...
On a computer screen in a lab, a scattered cluster of stone flakes suddenly snaps together into a single, razor-edged tool, each fragment rotating and locking into place as if time is running in ...
New Harvard 3D printing technique builds twistable, bendable robotic muscles in a single print with programmed movement logic ...
University of Rochester researchers discover that contrary to long-standing beliefs, motion from eye movements helps the ...
A newly created biologically inspired compound eye is helping scientists understand how insects use their compound eyes to sense an object and its trajectory with such speed. The compound eye could ...
There's a model of an odd-looking boat on a tabletop in front of me, and a woman is capturing it with her phone's camera. Only she's not just snapping a photo of the thing — she's moving around it, ...