The 1918 influenza was circulating silently before it began killing millions of people in just a year and a half.
Covering the life sciences inside and out
The 1918 influenza was circulating silently before it began killing millions of people in just a year and a half.
Soderbergh’s new pandemic thriller gets a lot of the science right, but does contain a few unlikely details.
Nerve signals control T cell responses, helping to explain inflammation and stroke.
Researchers have identified the cellular regulators of cytokine storms in influenza, which cause serious illness and death.
Researchers are developing ways to convert mature somatic cells from one cell type to another, avoiding the tumor-causing pluripotent stage associated with stem cells.
A round-up of recent discoveries in behavior research
A snapshot of the most highly ranked articles in aging research and related areas, from Faculty of 1000
People exposed to the dust cloud from the World Trade Center collapse still suffer from health problems.
Newly excavated Australopithecus sediba fossils exhibit a mixture of primitive and more modern features.
The Yersinia pestis strain extracted from the bones of Black Death victims may no longer exist.