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MIT scientists found that when people veer more than 13 degrees off-course in a crowd, orderly walking breaks down into ...
Let's again consider the Nasdaq-100. From its cyclical low at the start of 2023, it has delivered an 85% total return for ...
Why do some crowds move in an orderly fashion while others devolve into a chaotic jumble? New research led by an MIT ...
The California Department of Education released its list of 2025 distinguished schools, naming 336 elementary schools as ...
One way developers can check an LLM’s reliability is by asking it to explain how it answers prompts. While studying Claude’s ...
MIT applied mathematics instructor Karol Bacik and an international team of researchers have pinpointed a precise factor that ...
In the ebb and flow of crowded crosswalks, a surprising pattern emerges: people can naturally form neat lanes of movement.
Estimating a range can help you cut through fuzzy overthinking. Frame any problem with a best-case and worst-case scenario.
Innovative inverted pyramid Hall-effect sensors offer improved accuracy and reduced crosstalk, paving the way for ...
This order largely holds until people start veering across at more extreme angles. Then, the equation predicts that the ...