A small patient trial offers hope that cancer-killing viruses might be a viable therapy after all.
Covering the life sciences inside and out
A small patient trial offers hope that cancer-killing viruses might be a viable therapy after all.
How the bacteria found in a tuberculosis vaccine can improve the outcome of bladder cancer treatment
Engaging the brain with cognitive tasks helps paralyzed rats walk again.
One cancer researcher says that by focusing solely on stalling cancer growth, clinical trials are failing some potentially life-saving drugs that prevent metastasis.
A 30-year-old technique to record the electrical activity of neurons gets a robotic makeover.
A protein that keeps the immune response in check leads a double life as an anti-aging factor.
Adding texture to a lotus-leaf-like surface lets researchers control the movement of liquid droplets, and provides a cheap alternative for microfluidic applications.
What researchers are learning as they sequence, map, and decode species’ genomes
A lack of methodological detail in the published literature threatens the foundation of scientific discourse.
From breast milk stem cells to bone repair, this year’s EB conference held a number of exciting advances that could one day be translated into therapies.