An announcement from our neighbors to the west was largely overlooked during the runup to the holiday weekend, but could have major implications for the future of science.
An international team, including the University of Tokyo, has created a sensor inspired by the lateral line in fish—their ...
A vast stretch of islands across the South Pacific holds one of the oldest human stories on Earth. For tens of thousands of ...
He provided the first convincing evidence that cancerous tumors develop from a single mutated cell and later helped expose ...
A jellyfish no wider than a dime can do something human skin cannot. When its surface is torn, the wound can close in minutes ...
Earwax isn't dirt — it's an antimicrobial secretion split into two genetic types, tied to hearing loss risk, and able to flag ...
Fifty-eight motivated, academically accomplished juniors from more than 30 Wyoming high schools -- and one out-of-state ...
A team linked to Harvard Medical School has dosed the first patient in a clinical trial designed to reverse cellular aging in ...
A biomechanical well plate inspired by the pressure-sensing lateral line of fish can wirelessly monitor the pulse of multiple ...
Over the past decade, researchers at WashU Medicine have established that a molecule called SARM1 is a central trigger in the loss of axons, the vital wiring of the nervous system. Axon loss is ...
Optogenetic activation of silent VIP inhibitory neurons restores learning and motor function in Huntington's disease models.
Is there really such a thing as human nature? The answer lies between two old extremes, and getting it right shapes how we face AI, authoritarianism, and climate.