Research suggests that dolphins develop a lifelong vocal “name.” Here’s how they evolved this high level of social identity, once thought to be uniquely human.
YouTube on MSN
How some people echolocate like bats
Animals like bats and dolphins navigate the world using echolocation, but there’s also another animal capable of such a feat: ...
Of all the mammals in the world, humans by far have the strangest diets. As omnivores, we have the most variety of any other ...
Researchers made a robot bat that demonstrates how real bats use echolocation to find prey at night, contributing to the fields of biology, engineering, and robotics.
Wild dolphins use sea sponges as tools to hunt safely, revealing how animal culture survives despite hidden sensory costs.
5don MSN
Alien: Do xenomorphs have eyes?
H.R. Giger's original creature design continues to frighten audiences decades after it debuted in "Alien," but does the ...
Bats, nature’s original night-flyers, have a hidden navigation skill that outperforms even the most advanced human sensors. A ...
AlphaGenome is a leap forward in the ability to study the human blueprint. But the fine workings of our DNA are still largely ...
Thousands of years before the invention of compasses or sails, prehistoric peoples crossed oceans to reach remote lands like ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Robot bat reveals how big-eared bats find insects in darkness using sound echoes
Scientists from diverse universities conducted controlled experiments to determine how big-eared bats detect insects ...
A new study using Explainable Artificial Intelligence (XAI) has revealed land-use change—particularly deforestation and ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results