Some of the highlights from this year’s American Society for Cell Biology meeting, held earlier this week
Some of the highlights from this year’s American Society for Cell Biology meeting, held earlier this week
For honeybees, there’s no place like home. And every year, they must find a new one. Now, a study publishing today (December 8) in Science suggests that the honeybee swarms use inhibitory signals when house-hunting, paralleling the human brain’s deci
People who are emotionally connected are more likely to catch the yawns from one another.
Researchers use optogenetics to reverse drug-induced brain and behavioral changes.
Researchers have mapped out the DNA of what some scientists claim to be an arsenic loving bacterium.
Gene expression controlled from afar may have spurred the spurt in brain evolution that led to modern humans.
Neurons engineered to light up when they fire could help researchers study more precisely how the brain works.
New research suggests that a controversial class of stem cells originates in the heart and retains some ability to repair damaged tissue.
Through a series of sustained collaborations, Joshua Sanes has deciphered the molecular synergy that guides synapse formation.