🎭 A moment on the Jumbotron, a shared reaction — and a reminder of how live shows connect us. A new iScience study shows live performance can literally sync audience brainwaves, especially during shared attention and eye contact. Being there, together, changes how we experience the moment — neurologically. Read more. 👇
A recent survey by Elsevier highlights the growing adoption of generative AI tools in healthcare, revealing both the benefits and challenges associated with this trend. According to Elsevier’s Clinician of the Future 2025 survey, 28% of clinicians lack sufficient time for quality patient care, as AI tools become more prevalent, with patients increasingly turning to them for self-diagnosis. However, misinformation poses a significant issue. Read more...
At Elsevier, we recognize that AI is an essential part of the future of science. Whether it's extracting key insights more efficiently, finding funding opportunities, writing scientific articles, collaborating smoothly, or amplifying the impact of research, the next generation of tools for researchers must be based on precision, speed, and trustworthy content, and supported by responsible AI. According to our report, "Insights 2024: Attitudes toward AI," 92% of researchers believe that AI will increase the volume of scientific output, and 87% believe that AI will improve the quality. #Research #AI #PaperMills
🧬 What makes ginger cats orange, and why are most of them male? Two new studies in Current Biology by Cell Press reveal the answer: a missing DNA segment in the gene ARHGAP36, which affects pigment production and may also be linked to brain and hormonal development. Originally launched as a crowdfunded passion project, the research is now opening new questions about genetics, health and feline behaviour. Read more. 👇
Clinicians are under pressure — and turning to AI for help. Elsevier’s Clinician of the Future 2025 report shares insights from over 2,000 doctors and nurses worldwide. The takeaway: AI is gaining ground in healthcare, but trust, training and institutional support still have catching up to do. 📈 Nearly half of clinicians now use AI at work — up from 26% last year ⏱️ 70% say AI could help save time 🤝 But only 32% feel their institution provides adequate access to AI tools Clinicians see the potential. What they need now is support. Read the global findings — and what they mean for the future of care: http://spkl.io/6044AEFer
🚨 Elsevier has been ranked No. 1 globally, winning the prestigious 2025 Best Company Leadership and Best Career Growth awards! Based on the feedback of thousands of our colleagues, these awards reflect our purpose-led culture focused on innovation and growing every day as we help advance human progress together with the communities we serve. Thank you to our inspiring leaders and teams around the world who made this possible. 🔗 Learn more about the awards: Best Company Leadership - http://spkl.io/6049AEW7h Best Career Growth - http://spkl.io/6040AEWC6 🔗Join us. Let's shape progress together: http://spkl.io/6041AEWCB
Elsevier has launched Embase AI, a generative artificial intelligence tool designed to transform how researchers and medical professionals access and analyse biomedical data. The tool has been developed in collaboration with the scientific community and is built upon Elsevier's Embase platform, a widely used biomedical literature database. According to feedback from beta users, Embase AI can reduce the time spent on reviewing biomedical data by as much as 50%.
Who helps students navigate literature reviews and research methods? Librarians do—supporting research integrity, publishing skills and more at every stage of the scholarly journey. They play a vital role in shaping stronger research and better outcomes. We’re spotlighting stories of library impact from around the world: http://spkl.io/6041ADLk3
🧬 A 50,000-year genetic record, and a foundation for future health. A new Cell Press study sequences 2,700+ genomes from across India, tracing ancestry to Neolithic Iranian farmers, Steppe pastoralists, and South Asian hunter-gatherers. See what 50,000 years of evolutionary history can teach us. 👇
Science is changing fast. At Regeneron, John Vlahos is using AI tools alongside traditional lab work to keep pace. As a bench scientist and data science student, he’s helping bridge wet lab research with new AI tools like ScienceDirect AI, cutting hours of literature review to minutes, without compromising rigor. Read more: http://spkl.io/6047AD1X1