Daily Briefing
Friday, 20 March 2026

AI-Powered Light Scanning Sets a New Standard for Honey Adulteration Detection
Researchers have combined LED fluorescence with a hybrid AI model to spot fake honey with nearly 99 per cent accuracy. This method offers a fast, non-destructive way to scan food products, suggesting major upgrades for supply chain security over the next decade.
Global Analysis

Can Schema therapy treat severe mental illness? A rigorous new registered protocol
Researchers have published a preliminary protocol for a highly strict meta-analysis to evaluate the true efficacy of schema therapy. By applying advanced error-correction tools, they hope to correct the methodological flaws of past reviews.

Cavefish evolution: How genetic timelines map the future of climate conservation
Researchers analysed 183 species to trace the origins of cavefish in southwestern China back 44 million years. By linking fish diversification to ancient climate shifts, this research provides a crucial historical baseline to help inform conservation strategies for these unique habitats as the climate changes.

Fixing the Clock: Finding the Right TBI Sleep Disorders Treatment Without Pills
A comprehensive review of 22 clinical trials suggests that non-drug therapies like cognitive behavioural therapy and acupuncture are more effective than medication for fixing sleep after a head injury. The findings indicate that pills fail to address the root mechanical issues of the brain's disrupted sleep cycle.

How Computational Ethology is Rewriting the Rules of Neuroscience
A new review traces the 25-year evolution of automated animal tracking, highlighting the shift toward deep learning and 3D pose estimation. By mapping these algorithmic milestones, researchers outline how artificial intelligence will objectively measure behaviour over the next decade.

Measuring climate change resilience in Ethiopian farming: A new early-stage analysis
A new early-stage analysis estimates how Ethiopian farm households withstand extreme weather, revealing alarming vulnerability across specific agro-ecological zones. The research suggests that focusing on immediate 'absorptive capacity' may be the most effective intervention for survival.

Quantifying Coastal Flood Risk: How Mangroves and Reefs Defend Vulnerable Shorelines
A new study models the combined protective power of mangroves and coral reefs against extreme sea levels. The findings suggest these ecosystems could prevent billions in damages by 2050, particularly in highly vulnerable regions.

Remodelling Resistance: The Next Phase of HNSCC Immunotherapy
Researchers are abandoning empirical monotherapy in favour of precision-guided combinations to treat head and neck cancers. By actively remodelling the tumour microenvironment, these new strategies aim to make immunologically inert tissues vulnerable to immune attack.

Simulating Quantum Noise: An Early Look at Nitrogen-vacancy centers in Diamond
Researchers have used a quantum computer to simulate how atomic impurities degrade nanoscale sensors. These preliminary findings suggest a scalable alternative to classical computing for modelling complex quantum noise, though practical, many-spin applications remain a future goal.

The AI Bouncer: How Deep Learning is Upgrading Herbicide Activity Prediction
Finding new weed-killers requires sifting through thousands of useless chemicals to find one active molecule. A new deep learning framework called HerbGNN maps atomic structures to spot these rare compounds far more accurately than older algorithms.

The Clever Chemistry Making Covalent Adaptable Networks Tougher
Researchers have created a 'two-in-one' additive that speeds up chemical reactions in smart plastics while simultaneously making them stronger. By anchoring a volatile catalyst to a microscopic framework, they solved a major stability problem in polymer science.

The Hidden Blind Spot in Breast Cancer Genetics
Genetic screening for breast cancer often relies on European DNA data, missing risks in other populations. A new study on Arab women reveals specific regional mutations and proves that tailored risk scores can better predict who might get sick.