Out with toothpicks and pipettors; in with automation.
Out with toothpicks and pipettors; in with automation.
New innovations could bring tailored, fast, and cheap sequencing to the masses.
Engaging the brain with cognitive tasks helps paralyzed rats walk again.
A 30-year-old technique to record the electrical activity of neurons gets a robotic makeover.
Radioactive particles from the Fukushima nuclear disaster provide an unexpected way to track migratory marine species.
Meals left to mold develop colors, mycelia, and beads of digested juices, sparking the eye of an artist, and the slight concern of a mycologist.
A new SNP assay can determine the geographical origin of commonly overexploited fish species.
Adding texture to a lotus-leaf-like surface lets researchers control the movement of liquid droplets, and provides a cheap alternative for microfluidic applications.
The rainiest April in 100 years is keeping many insects from flourishing in the United Kingdom.
Orange-loving Trinidad guppies are curiously attracted to orange spots on prawn pincers, which may make it easier for the predators to snatch them up.