New research reveals that numbers in our visual field can subtly distort how we judge spatial positions, showing that perception is shaped by both numerical magnitude and object-based processing.
In the mid-19th century, Bernhard Riemann conceived of a new way to think about mathematical spaces, providing the foundation ...
The masses of fundamental particles such as the Z and W bosons could have arisen from the twisted geometry of hidden ...
NASA's Parker Solar Probe has generated the first continuous, two-dimensional maps of the Sun's outer atmosphere, revealing ...
Mathematicians present the Nopertedro: a Rupert property solid that broke an old myth by preventing one copy from passing ...
Researchers at Tsinghua University developed PriorFusion, a unified framework that integrates semantic, geometric, and generative shape priors to ...
Researchers from Tokyo Metropolitan University have studied the relationship between numerical information in our vision, and how it ...
Three artists, three questions, and a shared urge to find order in chaos through repetition, light, and form. Common ...
A 1.5-million-year-old skull fossil from Gona, Ethiopia now has a virtual face, thanks to digital reconstruction.
Robbins secured the traveling rights to the Missionary Ridge Cyclorama in 1889 and took it around the country, starting in ...
While the 21st century has been bumpy, it has also ushered in monumental scientific and technological breakthroughs that have ...
Three-dimensional modeling sits at the heart of modern design, engineering, and fabrication. Yet for blind and low-vision ...