A review of the new book Curious Behavior, which delves into the quirks of human conduct.
A review of the new book Curious Behavior, which delves into the quirks of human conduct.
Competition for resources between mothers- and daughters-in-law having children at the same time could have been a driver for the emergence of menopause.
A new initiative offers gold stars to researchers willing to have their studies replicated by other labs, but will it fix science’s growing irreproducibility problem?
Charles Nemeroff, who was barred from receiving grants for 2 years in 2008, snags $401K from the NIH to study PTSD.
Choreographer Merce Cunningham achieved a kind of immortality by employing technology to capture a solo dance that he never taught to his pupils.
Simply disclosing conflicts of interest is not enough.
Financial hardships of young scientists in training are forcing many talented researchers to find new careers.
Life scientists are increasingly posting manuscripts to the preprint server, joining the ranks of thousands of physicists.
Gifts of the Crow, What the Robin Knows, The Unfeathered Bird, and America’s Other Audubon