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Featured News provide with the most recently educational information’s, including the university news, events, business, ranking, programs and  admissions, etc…

Climate change can drive social tipping points – for better or for worse

It’s impossible to turn on the TV, listen to the radio or scroll social media without hearing about real-world climate impacts.

Ten “keys to reality” from Nobel laureate Frank Wilczek

To understand ourselves and our place in the universe, “we should have humility but also self-respect,” the physicist writes in a new book.

Drug Trends Survey shows increase in cannabis availability, while meth prices continue to drop

Findings from the 2022/23 New Zealand Drugs Trends Survey show a sharp increase in cannabis availability and decrease in price, as well as an ongoing decline in the price of methamphetamine.

Transforming quantum computing’s promise into practice

Electrical engineer William Oliver develops technology to enable reliable quantum computing at scale.

Researchers find similarities in the way both children and societies alter words’ meanings

An international team of researchers is using computer science to explore the knowledge foundation of word meaning in both child language development and the evolution of word meanings across languages.

​NTU Singapore’s Nanyang MBA jumps 35 places to break into top 40 in The...

Nanyang Technological University, Singapore (NTU Singapore) now ranks 38th in The Economist's latest ranking of Master of Business Administration (MBA) programmes worldwide.

Southampton researchers work on two major projects to improve health using AI

University of Southampton researchers are embarking on two major areas of research which harness the power of artificial intelligence (AI) to improve the health of patients.

Deliberate vaccine misinformation should be held to account – but better information is essential

Social media platforms and those spreading deliberate vaccine misinformation should be held accountable and potentially face criminal sanctions, says Professor Melinda Mills...
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