The National Institutes of Health will get tough on grantees who fail to comply with its open-access funding rule.
Daily News Roundup
The National Institutes of Health will get tough on grantees who fail to comply with its open-access funding rule.
An all-female species, distantly related to flatworms, steals all of genetic material it needs to diversify its genome.
An estimated 360 million Euros from the coffers of EU research funding was spent mistakenly; auditors blame overly complicated funding rules.
The largest collection of genetic and medical data in the United States links telomeres and genetic variants to longevity and disease.
The malaria vaccine under development by GSK and the PATH initiative only protects about one in three babies, though some researchers say those odds are better than nothing.
The 2011 outbreak in Germany that caused some 50 deaths was caused by a strain of E. coli with a complex mechanism of gene regulation.
Blind mole rats resist cancer by killing cells that proliferate in a similar way to tumor cells.
Researchers identify an unexpected molecular explanation for the higher incidence of skin cancer in redheads.
The American Association for the Advancement of Science says labeling genetically modified food products would be misleading.
A study finds that the genomes of swine and human flu viruses associated with a county fair in Ohio are almost perfectly matched, suggesting interspecies transmission.