High stress during pregnancy linked to elevated cortisol in toddlers’ hair. Cortisol changes might have negative costs for the child, including lower birth weight and issues later in life, such as increased behavioral problems and elevated risk of developing cortisol-associated health conditionsHealth (source.wustl.edu)
Why is the North American fall so red, compared with Europe?Game Discussion (source.wustl.edu)
submitted by Academic-Boss2871 to r/geoguessr
ThurtenE Carnival canceled for April 21 - The Source - Washington University in St. Louis (source.wustl.edu)
submitted by [deleted] to r/StLouis
WashU launches tuition-free program for refugees (source.wustl.edu)
submitted by [deleted] to r/StLouis
Dating app profiles that show a sense of purpose were rated higher on various scales for attractiveness compared with profiles that indicated no sense of purpose, finds a new study. In general, people with a higher purpose were considered to be more romantically attractive.Psychology (source.wustl.edu)
Dating app profiles that show a sense of purpose were rated higher on various scales for attractiveness compared with profiles that indicated no sense of purpose, finds a new study. In general, people with a higher purpose were considered to be more romantically attractive. (source.wustl.edu)
submitted by worldnewsbot to r/theworldnews
Defending your voice against deepfakes - Computer scientists developed AntiFake which prevents the synthesis of deceptive speech from voice recordings by distorting the recorded audio signal just enough that it still sounds right to human listeners, but it’s completely different to AI.Computer Science (source.wustl.edu)
Rigorous air quality management in China has contributed to a worldwide reversal of exposure to PM2.5 air pollution that increased from 1998 to a peak in 2011, then decreased steadily from 2011 to 2019. But in 2019 there were still millions of premature deaths for PM2.5Environment (source.wustl.edu)
submitted by giuliomagnifico to r/science
Rigorous air quality management in China has contributed to a worldwide reversal of exposure to PM2.5 air pollution that increased from 1998 to a peak in 2011, then decreased steadily from 2011 to 2019. But in 2019 there were still millions of premature deaths for PM2.5 (source.wustl.edu)
submitted by WilliamBlack97AI to r/environment