Editor’s Choice in Immunology
In Chapter 5, "The Stable and the Laboratory," author Michael Willrich explores the burgeoning vaccine manufacture industry that ramped up to combat smallpox epidemics in turn-of-the-twentieth-century American cities.
Studying the earliest events in visual development, Carla Shatz has learned the importance of looking at one’s data with open eyes—and an open mind.
When European explorers and fishermen began to frequent Canada’s shores in the 16th century, they brought with them a plethora of tools and trinkets, including knives, axes, kettles, and blankets. The region’s indigenous people traded the Europeans f
United Nation officials declare rinderpest the first animal disease to be fully eradicated.
The president of the University of the Ryukyus in Japan coauthored a paper containing a duplicated figure.
Despite drug company’s and patients’ pleading, an FDA panel votes to rescind Avastin approval for breast cancer.
A confession and supportive letters convince a judge to go easy on a researcher who fabricated data in a federal grant proposal
A male hormone-blocker currently used to treat prostate cancer may also benefit breast cancer patients.
A new report suggests that potential malaria treatments currently under study comprise the largest drug pipeline in history.