The Present
All Stories
A game that challenges pedestrians to avoid detection by an AI could help train tomorrow’s self-driving cars.
To see a true cross-section of American society, head to Applebee's, Buffalo Wild Wings, IHOP, Chili’s, and Olive Garden.
AIs can imitate but not innovate — for now, at least.
Through humility, the old arrogance of infallibility crumbles. And in that there is genuine hope to prevent wrongful convictions.
We've heard this argument before.
When the UK bans the American Bully XL this year, it won't rely on science to identify them.
Did they spend the money on themselves or others?
Simple "nudges" to remind people to show up for court could help keep thousands out of jail.
The region of Catalonia has been at odds with greater Spain for over 300 years. The prospect of autonomy remains a distant and fading dream.
Experts say it’s likely space junk—and there’s plenty more where that came from.
Wherever automation rises, religiosity falls.
"The more I unleash myself from the tethers of domestication, the happier I feel."
Ideal models of family life have been broken by societal, technological, and cultural shifts — and we need to rethink our options.
Predictive power has perverse, anti-democratic consequences. So be a good citizen and lie to election pollsters.
It could cut the time needed to reach Mars in half.
Big Think covered the 2012 study shortly after it was published. We are now correcting the record.
While the steep rise of inequality in the United States is well-known, long-run data on the incomes of the richest shows countries have followed a variety of trajectories.
Lab-grown meat may work better as a complement to animal agriculture rather than a replacement of it.
Our state of extreme social interconnectedness has rapidly accelerated the rollercoaster pace at which societal confidence may collapse.
We're separating the facts about EVs from the fiction.
With U.S. infrastructure crumbling, an honor oath and iron ring remind engineers of their profession's ethical weight.
In the land of the double-blind, impartiality is king.
Science news presents a flood of breakthroughs and discoveries that promise to change our lives. They rarely do.
A 2020 study revived a longstanding controversy over Christopher Columbus' claims of marauding cannibals in the Caribbean.
Over the past two decades, the proportion of those who identify as bisexual increased from 1.2% to 4.5%.
Research suggests that employees with criminal records are far less likely to quit their jobs, perhaps due to a greater sense of loyalty.
The Human Chronome Project finds that the average human sleeps for 9 hours but only works for 2.6 hours.
Particles behave differently when freed from the force of gravity. A new space factory aims to use this to synthesize pharmaceuticals.
A new online religion is spreading misinformation and phony products.
There may be more energy in methane hydrates than in all the world’s oil, coal, and gas combined. It could be the perfect "bridge fuel" to a clean energy future.