Fueled by donations, sweat, and occasional dumpster diving, community laboratories for DIY biologists are cropping up around the country.
Fueled by donations, sweat, and occasional dumpster diving, community laboratories for DIY biologists are cropping up around the country.
A survey of The Scientist readers reveals who buys cell-growth products from whom, and why.
| March 1, 2013
Meet some of the people featured in the March 2013 issue of The Scientist.
Nanoscale cracks in bone dissipate energy to protect against fracture, a process that appears to be regulated by the interaction of two proteins.
Things break in the lab. Here’s how to protect your equipment, and what to do when it stops working.
Inducing certain brain patterns extends non-REM sleep in mice.
Scotch tape and a scalpel provide a MacGyver-esque approach to microfabrication.
Patients are sidestepping clinical research and using themselves as guinea pigs to test new treatments for fatal diseases. Will they hurt themselves, or science?
During development, communication between organs determines their relative final size.