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    <description>What the paper says. What it does not. Why it matters.</description>
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      <title>Giant Cretaceous octopuses may have been top predators — but the evidence starts with jaws, not sea monsters</title>
      <link>https://thecleanpaper.com/cretaceous-giant-octopuses/</link>
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      <description>A Science paper reexamines huge Cretaceous cephalopod jaws and argues that two Nanaimoteuthis species were early finned octopuses, with body-size estimates reaching several meters and possibly up to 18.6 m. Heavy jaw wear suggests hard-prey crushing; asymmetric wear may hint at lateralized behavior. It is a spectacular fossil story, but the clean version is not &#39;the kraken was real&#39;: it is a reconstruction from jaws, wear patterns, taxonomy, and scaling.</description>
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      <title>A solid material turns visible blue light into UV at sunlight-level intensity — but it is not a solar-energy machine</title>
      <link>https://thecleanpaper.com/solid-state-photon-upconversion/</link>
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      <description>Researchers engineered DHI-based organic crystals whose alkyl side chains protect the π-electron system without stopping triplet energy from moving. The best iBu-DHI/Ir(ppy)₃ solid film produced visible-to-UV triplet-annihilation upconversion with 1.9% absolute quantum yield and a 1.2 mW cm⁻² threshold near the solar intensity around 445 nm. That is a real materials advance for solid-state photon upconversion. It is not a working solar device, not &#39;free UV,&#39; and not proof that visible sunlight can yet drive useful UV chemistry at scale.</description>
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      <title>Do big robot “foundation models” actually work better? A careful answer — modestly yes, and most studies can&#39;t tell</title>
      <link>https://thecleanpaper.com/large-behavior-models-careful-evaluation/</link>
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      <description>Toyota Research Institute trained “large behavior models” — robot policies pretrained on ~1,700 hours of diverse manipulation data — and tested them against from-scratch single-task policies with unusual rigour: blind, randomized, large-sample trials (~1,800 real-world, 47,000+ simulation) with real statistics. After per-task finetuning the big models did better on average, needed roughly 3–5× less task-specific data, and were more robust when conditions shifted; performance rose smoothly with more pretraining data. But used without finetuning they did not consistently beat single-task models, several effects were small enough to need the large samples to see at all, and a mundane data-normalisation choice mattered more than architecture. It is measured support for the robot-foundation-model direction — not a general-purpose robot, not a zero-shot generalist, not an “emergent leap” — plus a pointed warning that much of robotics may be measuring noise.</description>
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      <title>Muon-catalysed fusion: a hidden reaction step, seen directly at last — not a step toward fusion energy</title>
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      <description>Using an exceptionally sharp quantum-sensor X-ray detector, physicists fired muons into frozen deuterium and, for the first time, directly observed muonic molecules in fleeting “resonance” states — revealing that about half the muons take a pathway left out of the standard description of muon-catalysed fusion. It confirms a long-proposed formation mechanism and forces a revision of the field&#39;s models. It is a real advance in seeing and understanding the reaction — not a step toward fusion as an energy source: it does not improve efficiency, does not touch the muon-loss (“alpha sticking”) bottleneck, and was done in deuterium, not the energy-relevant deuterium–tritium mix.</description>
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      <title>A new family of RNA-guided DNA-targeting systems — distinct from CRISPR, and not yet a gene-editing tool</title>
      <link>https://thecleanpaper.com/tigr-tas-rna-guided/</link>
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      <description>Mining microbial genomes, researchers found TIGR-Tas, a previously unknown family of RNA-guided systems that cut DNA — using a two-part guide and no “PAM” landing site, unlike CRISPR. They showed one version can be programmed to edit human cells, but only at low efficiency, and traced the family&#39;s deep evolutionary links to other RNA-guided machines. It is a real expansion of what we know about RNA-guided biology, and a possible new starting point for future tools — a basic-science discovery and proof of concept, not a mature gene editor or a therapy.</description>
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      <title>Engineered mice inherited Lyme resistance and stopped infecting ticks — a lab proof of concept, not a wild release</title>
      <link>https://thecleanpaper.com/heritable-lyme-immunization/</link>
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      <description>Researchers put an anti-Lyme antibody gene into house mice, which then inherited it for generations; challenged with infected ticks, even single-copy mice resisted infection and largely stopped passing the bacterium on to new ticks. It is a proof of principle for “heritable immunization” of a reservoir species — done in lab house mice, not the wild white-footed mouse that actually spreads Lyme, with no field release and the ecology, regulation and ethics still wide open. It is not a gene drive, and not “Lyme solved.”</description>
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      <title>In mice, a two-step growth-factor treatment regrows an amputated digit&#39;s lost bones — imperfectly</title>
      <link>https://thecleanpaper.com/digit-regeneration-in-mice/</link>
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      <description>At a mouse digit amputation that normally heals with a scar, implanting FGF2 and then BMP2 raised a blastema and regrew the lost phalanx and a small joint — similar to the originals but not identical, and far from a whole limb. It suggests the cells and signals for regeneration can be present even where mammals usually fail: a proof of principle in mice, not a human therapy.</description>
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      <title>Interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS carries water that formed colder than our own comets’ — a first chemical reading of another planetary system</title>
      <link>https://thecleanpaper.com/interstellar-comet-3i-atlas-water/</link>
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      <description>Using ALMA, astronomers constrained the ratio of “heavy” to ordinary hydrogen in the water of 3I/ATLAS — the third known interstellar object — and found it strongly deuterium-enriched: at least about 40 times Earth’s oceans and 30 times a typical Solar System comet. That points to water that formed under colder conditions than our own comets’. The result is a lower limit, derived indirectly (the water itself was never directly detected), and it says nothing about life or technology — only about chemistry and cold.</description>
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      <title>Why language models hallucinate — and why the way we grade them keeps it that way</title>
      <link>https://thecleanpaper.com/why-language-models-hallucinate/</link>
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      <description>The confident falsehoods we call “hallucinations” are not a mysterious glitch: some are a statistical by-product of training, and they persist because mainstream benchmarks reward a confident guess over an honest “I don&#39;t know.” A case study on four frontier models shows that stating the scoring rules in the prompt (“open rubrics”) reverses that incentive.</description>
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      <title>Two anomalous radio pulses over Antarctica remain unexplained — and the “new particle” explanation is losing support</title>
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      <description>Two unusual radio pulses recorded years ago by a balloon-borne Antarctic experiment still have no agreed explanation; a dedicated Pierre Auger search found no trace of the showers they would imply, making the exotic “new particle” reading far less likely while leaving the anomaly unsolved.</description>
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