A handful of life science researchers will take home the United States' top science honor.
A handful of life science researchers will take home the United States' top science honor.
How an Italian scientist doing Frankenstein-like experiments on dead frogs discovered that the body is powered by electrical impulses.
A German ethics council weighs in on the discussion about the use of human-animal chimeras in research.
Researchers find that sampling DNA from the soil can be an effective way to determine how many individuals of a variety of species inhabit a particular area.
A female bulldog with testicles but no SRY gene considered scientific anomaly.
Three-dimensional scaffolds for growing and guiding neurons are getting smaller and more tailored in design.
This year’s winners research topics ranging from stem cell regulation to brain damage from football injuries.
Careful oversight is required to ensure that chimeras and transgenic animals continue to serve as powerful biomedical research tools.
A snapshot of the most highly ranked articles in genomics, genetics and related areas, from Faculty of 1000
Researchers package a fluorescence microscope—including the light and camera—that can image the brain of a freely moving mouse.