A proposal to grant captive chimpanzees the same endangered species status as wild chimps could hamper medical research.
Daily News Roundup
A proposal to grant captive chimpanzees the same endangered species status as wild chimps could hamper medical research.
A Canadian lab demonstrates upgrades to hospital cyclotrons that can yield enough diagnostic tracer element overnight to meet an entire city’s daily needs.
Following criticism of a National Cancer Institute communications office budget, biologists defend the spending.
Crowdsourcing biomedical research; bird flu contagion?; zebrafish shed light on inherited muscle disorder; the economics of the Human Genome Project; the epigenetics of pair bonding
Rules regarding the use of cells derived from human embryos will deny many US researchers the chance to study new stem-cell lines created by cloning.
The mosquito’s role in malaria virulence; the value of grant review; Europe must embrace GM crops; why roaches avoid sugary bait
Pregnant mice exposed to the chemical used in many plastics have offspring with behavioral abnormalities.
Top brass at the US science agency aired monetary grievances before a Senate committee last week.
Patients with major depressive disorder appear to have malfunctioning circadian rhythms, which could lead researchers to new avenues for treatment.
HHS tells an open-access publisher to stop using the NIH, the names of its employees, and its scientific literature databases in a “misleading manner.”