From lipstick that lasts to water bottles that stay cool, students tested products and theories during a science fair at ...
Since you can’t exactly breathalyze a wild ape, Aleksey Maro, a UC Berkeley researcher, spent his days collecting chim ...
Aggregating ‘negative’ immunotherapy trials can uncover reproducible immune perturbations that are missed in single studies, reframing lack of clinical benefit as potentially informative biologic ...
The recent nine-fatality ski tragedy in California is analyzed in relation to four "heuristic traps": familiarity, social ...
A new research perspective was published in Volume 18 of Aging-US on February 24, 2026, titled “A decline in glycolytic ATP production is the fundamental mechanism limiting lifespan; species with an ...
Many people expect the world to end soon. A new study reveals that these apocalyptic narratives consistently predict how individuals perceive and plan to respond to real global hazards like climate ...
Over 85 years after it began, the Einstein-Bohr debate remains the most consequential intellectual rivalry in modern science — one that shaped quantum mechanics, redefined human understanding of ...
Adding a parental mindfulness intervention improved parenting and child food intake and obesity risk over nutrition and activity counseling alone.
Explore SLAS Boston 2026 insights on connecting laboratory automation and data infrastructure in drug discovery workflows.
Science is messy business. Finding the truth is easier said than done.
Left-handers are more competitive than right-handers, according to a new study published in the journal Scientific Reports. The findings may help explain why left-handedness has persisted throughout ...
Why do analytical people fall for conspiracy theories? A new study reveals that individuals who crave strict rules and predictable patterns are easily drawn to the artificial sense of order that ...