“The chin evolved largely by accident and not through direct selection, but as an evolutionary byproduct resulting from ...
A car backfires, and your shoulders jump. A shadow moves, and your eyes fly open before your brain catches up. That dramatic flash of white sclera around widened eyes feels automatic because it is.
Learn how repeated burn injuries may have acted as a form of natural selection, influencing human genes linked to healing and immune response.
A team at the Hübner and Diecke Labs at the Max Delbrück Center has shown how human and non-human primate hearts differ genetically. The study, published in Nature Cardiovascular Research, reveals ...
It’s a common mistake to think we came directly from the monkeys or chimps you see at the zoo today, […] ...
Meanwhile, medical research has changed. We can now study human disease using patient-derived cells, human organoids, advanced imaging and computational tools that reveal mechanisms we could not see ...
A team in the Hübner and Diecke Labs at the Max Delbrück Center have shown how human and non-human primate hearts differ genetically. The study, published in “Nature Cardiovascular Research,” reveals ...