In a New York Times op-ed, Surgeon General Vivek Murthy wrote that the U.S. needs to focus on its "epidemic of loneliness," and that half of Americans are lonely — including himself. He pointed out that some of the health risks of loneliness, such as depression, anxiety, heart disease, dementia, and stroke, make it comparable to smoking daily. He proposed a three-step process to help with the epidemic: invest in social infrastructure, reconsider how we use technology, and strengthen our personal connections.
PREVENTING DEMENTIA
A new study shows that being bilingual can help prevent dementia. Researchers tested hundreds of older people on learning, memory, language, and decision-making and found that those who used two languages daily performed consistently better than those who knew only one language.
CANCER-DETECTING AI
Researchers and doctors at the National Health Service in the United Kingdom have built an artificial intelligence application that can detect cancer. According to new research published in The Lancet, the AI tool was developed using hundreds of lung scans from real patients, training it on the subtle differences between cancerous and non-cancerous growths that are often difficult to see with the human eye.
An exclusive look inside New York City's Superbueno with founder "Nacho" Jimenez, who's Mexican-American concept has just been named the best bar in the country
New York Harbor once held half the world's oyster population. Discover how the team at Billion Oyster Project is racing to restore this underwater ecosystem
With satellites already in orbit, defense contractor L3Harris is standing by to accelerate Trump's executive order. We take an inside look at the technology
Why aren't more people drinking sake? A look inside Brooklyn Kura, the first American company to export sake to Japan and demystify the brewing process
What does it take to market one of the biggest franchises in video game history? Tyler Bahl, CMO at Activision Publishing, explains how at Web Summit Vancouver