Skin deep: New research reveals the secret to ancient fish scales’ survival
Peer-Reviewed Publication
This month, we’re focusing on artificial intelligence (AI), a topic that continues to capture attention everywhere. Here, you’ll find the latest research news, insights, and discoveries shaping how AI is being developed and used across the world.
Updates every hour. Last Updated: 20-Nov-2025 18:11 ET (20-Nov-2025 23:11 GMT/UTC)
A Curtin University-led international study has solved the mystery of how the skin of a fossilised fish was able to be preserved for 52 million years, extending our understanding of how even the most delicate of biological material can survive deep time.
Bochum, Germany, October 29, 2025, Researchers from Research Center for Future Energy Materials and Systems at the Ruhr University Bochum, Software for Chemistry & Materials BV, and Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam have demonstrated that modern universal machine learning interatomic potentials (uMLIPs) can now accurately describe systems ranging from single molecules to bulk solids, representing a significant leap forward for uMLIPs in materials science. The study introduces the 0123D dataset, comprising 40,000 diverse structures specifically designed to benchmark model performance across all dimensionalities.
Indianapolis, Indiana – October 11, 2025 – The American Academy of Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery Foundation (AAO-HNSF) opened its 129th Annual Meeting & OTO EXPO in Indianapolis, Indiana, today, welcoming more than 5,400 otolaryngologist-head and neck surgeons, researchers, and healthcare professionals from across the United States and over 75 countries for four days of groundbreaking research, cutting-edge innovations, and collaborative learning.
Researchers from the Technical University of Munich have developed URNet, a novel artificial intelligence model that helps autonomous driving systems perceive their surroundings more clearly—even in dark, fast-changing environments. By combining an unconventional “event camera” with a self-aware framework, URNet allows vehicles to build reliable 3D maps that measure how far objects are—a process known as depth estimation—while understanding how confident they should be about what they “see.” This innovation could make next-generation self-driving cars safer and more capable of navigating complex real-world conditions.