A new play about the father of modern neuroscience explores the many facets of Santiago Ramón y Cajal's work, personality, and life.
Covering the life sciences inside and out
A new play about the father of modern neuroscience explores the many facets of Santiago Ramón y Cajal's work, personality, and life.
Adult human ovaries contain a population of stem cells capable of generating immature egg cells.
Despite suggestions to the contrary, the Y chromosome is not necessarily rotting away.
Funding only outstanding researchers is increasing the gap between good and great labs and forcing some out of science in search of a bigger paycheck.
An architecture graduate constructs intricate botanical illustrations using the computer graphics programs intended to design buildings.
Often thought to be artifacts of the lab, prions in yeast may actually drive the evolution of beneficial traits.
Imaging cell cytoskeletons during early embryonic development leads researchers to uncover a new regulator of cell shape
A single mutant cell breaks free of its neighbors in the early stages of cancer development.
While biotechnology has met with mixed public reactions, to date nanotechnology seems to invoke much less public concern.
Hormones in the brain control sex-specific behaviors by activating individual genetic programs.