Expecting significant cuts to the federal research budget, scientists are scratching expensive DNA sequencers off their wish lists.
Expecting significant cuts to the federal research budget, scientists are scratching expensive DNA sequencers off their wish lists.
Researchers have pinpointed the region of a key cancer gene that’s involved in tumor suppression.
Last week researchers released the first non-invasive prenatal test for Down syndrome, and more such tests are expected in the coming months.
A bevy of genes known to be active during human fetal and infant development first appeared at the same time that the prefrontal cortex—the area of the brain associated with human intelligence and personality—took shape in primates, a new study publi
Two genome-wide studies, backed up by field experiments, identify SNPs that correlate with Arabidopsis fitness in various climates.
A new device for directing fluids is designed to deliver chemical cues directly to petri dishes without disturbing cells.
Deletions or duplications of a certain genomic region implicated in autism can induce autism-like brain and behavior changes in mice.
Read about beginnings of neuroscience through the eyes of Nobel Prize winner Eric Kandel, and how researchers today envision the future of the field.
Early sequencing evolved into the publication of genomes for myriad species, including our own, within the span of two and a half decades. Bioinformatician Stephen Friend opines on what's in store as the next quarter century of omics takes shape.
To the great scientific leaps witnessed during our first 25 years, and the game changers yet to come.