Whether infecting hot spring-dwelling microbes or humans, viruses co-opt the same group of proteins to assemble themselves and break out of cells.
Whether infecting hot spring-dwelling microbes or humans, viruses co-opt the same group of proteins to assemble themselves and break out of cells.
US universities need to reach across their own borders to retain global scientific preeminence.
The NIH remains a Caucasian-dominated workforce. Why haven’t the agency’s efforts to diversify been successful?
Take a closer look at some of the statistics generated by The Scientist's Best Place to Work Industry 2013 survey.
Publishers need to be proactive about detecting and deterring copied text.
Highways and byways are among the man-made environmental alterations driving the evolution of animals on contemporary timescales, with implications for ecology.
Raising one evolutionary question after another, Brandon Gaut has harvested a crop of novel findings about how plant genomes evolve.
Scientists working in developing nations who engage in capacity building find it bolsters the lives of locals and their own work.
Research misconduct is not limited to the developed world, but few countries anywhere are responding adequately.
Yale University evolutionary biologist Steven Brady studies the evolutionary impacts of roads on the amphibians.