Professional dialogue between scientists and non-scientists is not easy, but when successful, it can create powerful insights and relationships.
Covering the life sciences inside and out
Professional dialogue between scientists and non-scientists is not easy, but when successful, it can create powerful insights and relationships.
Researchers use characteristic differences in eye movements to identify patients with deficits in neurological function.
Researchers monitor the movement of the Pacific’s largest predators and share the information with the world in real time.
The latest news from a long-term study of calorie restriction in rhesus macaques shows better health, but no boost in lifespan, in monkeys who eat less.
Information picked up while we slumber can stay with us when we awake, even if we aren’t aware of it.
A review of the new book Curious Behavior, which delves into the quirks of human conduct.
A new initiative offers gold stars to researchers willing to have their studies replicated by other labs, but will it fix science’s growing irreproducibility problem?
Choreographer Merce Cunningham achieved a kind of immortality by employing technology to capture a solo dance that he never taught to his pupils.
Simply disclosing conflicts of interest is not enough.
Chemicals that change the way DNA is packaged could improve the effects of current antipsychotics.