


Why do people sleep? A new study points to the brain
Experiments on fruit flies suggest tiredness could be caused by damaged neurons
IT IS HARD to overstate the importance of sleep. Regular hours of rest offer organisms of all sizes a chance to consolidate memories, repair cells and boost the health of their immune systems. But the source of the urge to sleep, known to scientists as sleep pressure (and everyone else as tiredness), has remained elusive.
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Does AI make you stupid?
Creativity and critical thinking might take a hit. But there are ways to soften the blow

Should you take creatine?
The performance-enhancing drug is legal, safe—and may have benefits beyond sport

Could hormones help treat some forms of anxiety and depression?
Mental illnesses that do not respond to standard treatment could be hormone-driven
Ancient proteins could transform palaeontology
Found in fossils many millions of years old, they could help scientists study long-extinct species
Astronomers have spotted an interstellar comet older than the Sun
Its appearance puts a new branch of astronomy to the test
RFK junior wants to ban an ingredient in vaccines. Is he right?
Studies show that thimerosal does more good than harm