Illustration of a person's head which is breaking up into digital squares from the back of their head

Scientists have invented a way to erase bad memories. But should we?

We may soon be able to delete bad memories for ever. But forgetting comes at a cost
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A model of a Neanderthal woman, with a skull

The first known dentist was actually a Neanderthal, study finds

Russian archaeologists have discovered evidence of a sophisticated dental procedure that took place nearly 60,000 years ago
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A soft, pastel-coloured digital illustration of a cone shape emerging from a bright glowing orb, with gentle waves of pink, yellow and blue light radiating outward.

A bizarre flickering light is forcing scientists to rethink where reality comes from

Stroboscopic light therapy started in the lab, detoured through wellness culture, and arrived somewhere genuinely interesting
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Red beans arranged into a heart

The one food all cholesterol experts want you to eat

From heart health to sustainability, beans are the unsung heroes of a balanced diet
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Issue 432 of BBC Science Focus is on sale from 23 April 2026

New issue: Mirrorlife

Mirror life could end all life on Earth. That sounds dramatic, but senior biologists have raised the alarm about experiments happening all around the world. It sounds like something in a Doctor Who plot, but no – mirror life is a real possibility. So why do scientists want to create something that’s potentially apocalyptic? Well, it could also have huge benefits. The first thing to say, however, is that mirror organisms are still a little way away yet – but only decades, not centuries. So far, scientists have only made mirror molecules, one of life’s building blocks. What for? Life works because its building blocks fit together. Imagine drilling a screw into a piece of wood. The screw cuts a hole with a thread that snugly matches its own. If, for some reason, the Doctor showed up and handed you a mirror version of the screw, its thread would be in reverse. It wouldn’t twist into the hole you’d just made as the threads wouldn’t match. That said, the mirror screw would still work; you’d just have to create a mirror hole for it. Mirror molecules, including DNA, work a bit like that. They follow the same principles as the biology around us, but they’re entirely incompatible with traditional biological functions. In medical terms, this means they’re effectively invisible to your body’s systems. Our biology doesn’t have the tools to recognise these molecules and break them apart. And if someone took these mirror molecules and put them together to make a cell and then an organism… you’d have mirror life. But we don't have any way of breaking it down. If it escaped the lab, we’d just have to hope it didn’t have an appetite.
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Illustration of a brain wearing a ruff and accompanying old-timey hat

Does my brain live a little in the past?

Does your brain live in the past? Here's how the brain processes and smooths over out-of-date sensory information
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Married woman taking off wedding ring.

5 early signs your marriage is heading for divorce

Forget the obvious red flags. Researchers have found the real warning signs hiding in everyday relationship habits
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Couple kissing.

Why humans simply aren’t built for strict monogamy

This is what science actually says about humans’ capacity for commitment
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Aerial view of a selection of sweets on a table

The 5 most harmful processed ingredients experts say you need to limit

We all know that ultra-processed foods are bad for us, but what ingredients should we particularly try to avoid? And what are they doing to our bodies?
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